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The effects of polygenic risk for psychiatric disorders and smoking behaviour on psychotic experiences in UK Biobank.


ABSTRACT: While psychotic experiences are core symptoms of mental health disorders like schizophrenia, they are also reported by 5-10% of the population. Both smoking behaviour and genetic risk for psychiatric disorders have been associated with psychotic experiences, but the interplay between these factors remains poorly understood. We tested whether smoking status, maternal smoking around birth, and number of packs smoked/year were associated with lifetime occurrence of three psychotic experiences phenotypes: delusions (n?=?2067), hallucinations (n?=?6689), and any psychotic experience (delusions or hallucinations; n?=?7803) in 157,366 UK Biobank participants. We next calculated polygenic risk scores for schizophrenia (PRSSCZ), bipolar disorder (PRSBP), major depression (PRSDEP) and attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (PRSADHD) in 144,818 UK Biobank participants of European ancestry to assess whether association between smoking and psychotic experiences was attenuated after adjustment of diagnosis of psychiatric disorders and the PRSs. Finally, we investigated whether smoking exacerbates the effects of genetic predisposition on the psychotic phenotypes in gene-environment interaction models. Smoking status, maternal smoking, and number of packs smoked/year were associated with psychotic experiences (p?

SUBMITTER: Garcia-Gonzalez J 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC7523004 | biostudies-literature | 2020 Sep

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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The effects of polygenic risk for psychiatric disorders and smoking behaviour on psychotic experiences in UK Biobank.

García-González Judit J   Ramírez Julia J   Howard David M DM   Brennan Caroline H CH   Munroe Patricia B PB   Keers Robert R  

Translational psychiatry 20200928 1


While psychotic experiences are core symptoms of mental health disorders like schizophrenia, they are also reported by 5-10% of the population. Both smoking behaviour and genetic risk for psychiatric disorders have been associated with psychotic experiences, but the interplay between these factors remains poorly understood. We tested whether smoking status, maternal smoking around birth, and number of packs smoked/year were associated with lifetime occurrence of three psychotic experiences pheno  ...[more]

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