A genetic investigation of sex bias in the prevalence of attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder

Date

2018

Authors

Martin, J.
Walters, R.K.
Demontis, D.
Mattheisen, M.
Lee, S.H.
Neale, B.M.

Editors

Advisors

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Type:

Journal article

Citation

Biological Psychiatry, 2018; 83(12):1044-1053

Statement of Responsibility

Conference Name

Abstract

Background: Attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) shows substantial heritability and is two to seven times more common in male individuals than in female individuals. We examined two putative genetic mechanisms underlying this sex bias: sex-specific heterogeneity and higher burden of risk in female cases. Methods: We analyzed genome-wide autosomal common variants from the Psychiatric Genomics Consortium and iPSYCH Project (n = 20,183 cases, n = 35,191 controls) and Swedish population register data (n = 77,905 cases, n = 1,874,637 population controls). Results: Genetic correlation analyses using two methods suggested near complete sharing of common variant effects across sexes, with r g estimates close to 1. Analyses of population data, however, indicated that female individuals with ADHD may be at especially high risk for certain comorbid developmental conditions (i.e., autism spectrum disorder and congenital malformations), potentially indicating some clinical and etiological heterogeneity. Polygenic risk score analysis did not support a higher burden of ADHD common risk variants in female cases (odds ratio [confidence interval] = 1.02 [0.98-1.06] , p = .28). In contrast, epidemiological sibling analyses revealed that the siblings of female individuals with ADHD are at higher familial risk for ADHD than the siblings of affected male individuals (odds ratio [confidence interval] = 1.14 [1.11-1.18] , p = 1.5E-15). Conclusions: Overall, this study supports a greater familial burden of risk in female individuals with ADHD and some clinical and etiological heterogeneity, based on epidemiological analyses. However, molecular genetic analyses suggest that autosomal common variants largely do not explain the sex bias in ADHD prevalence.

School/Discipline

Dissertation Note

Provenance

Description

Data source: Supplementary material, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.biopsych.2017.11.026

Access Status

Rights

Copyright 2017 Society of Biological Psychiatry This is an open access article under the CC BY license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/)

License

Grant ID

Call number

Persistent link to this record