Major depression and associated impairment: Same or different genetic and environmental risk factors?

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Abstract

Objective: Impairment was added as a diagnostic criterion for many psychiatric disorders in DSM-IV. Does the addition of impairment influence only prevalence rates, or does it also introduce new etiological factors into psychiatric diagnoses? Method: A lifetime history of major depression and associated functional impairment was assessed by personal interview with 3,669 female and 4,377 male twins from the population-based Virginia Twin Registry. Structural equation modeling was used to estimate the correlation between risk factors for major depression and associated functional impairment. Results: While the risk factors for major depression and associated functional impairment are substantially correlated, they are not identical. The most parsimonious model suggests that over a quarter of the variance in associated functional impairment is due to factors unrelated to risk for major depression. Of the variance unique to associated functional impairment, approximately one-third is familial. The relationship between associated functional impairment and major depression did not differ significantly between men and women. Conclusions: Risk factors for major depression and associated functional impairment are substantially but imperfectly correlated. The addition of associated functional impairment as a criterion for the diagnosis of major depression not only lowers prevalence estimates but also introduces a small set of new etiological factors into the diagnosis of major depression.

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APA

Foley, D. L., Neale, M. C., Gardner, C. O., Pickles, A., & Kendler, K. S. (2003). Major depression and associated impairment: Same or different genetic and environmental risk factors? American Journal of Psychiatry, 160(12), 2128–2133. https://doi.org/10.1176/appi.ajp.160.12.2128

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