Gene-Environment Interplay Linking Peer Victimization With Adolescents’ Trajectories of Depressive Symptoms - 25/01/23
, Yao Zheng, PhD b, Frank Vitaro, PhD c, Ginette Dionne, PhD d, Michel Boivin, PhD dAbstract |
Objective |
This study examined to what extent genetic and environmental factors explain—either additively or interactively with peer victimization—different trajectories of adolescents’ depressive symptoms and whether genetic factors related to distinct trajectories are correlated with peer victimization.
Method |
Participants included 902 twins (52% girls) who self-reported peer victimization and depressive symptoms in grades 6, 7, 8, 9, and 11.
Results |
Growth mixture modeling revealed 3 trajectories of depressive symptoms: low (69.2% of participants), increasing (19.5%), and high-decreasing-increasing (11.3%). Biometric modeling showed that, for both sexes, genetic factors explained roughly half (52.6%, 47.5%) of the probability of following either a low or an increasing trajectory. Genetic influences (41%) were also observed for the high-decreasing-increasing trajectory, albeit only for girls. Nonshared environmental influences explained the remaining variances, along with shared environmental influences (27%) on the high-decreasing-increasing trajectory. Only for the low and the increasing trajectories, nonshared environmental influences increased with more frequent peer victimization (blow = 0.206, 95% CI [0.094, 0.325]; bincreasing = 0.246, 95% CI [0.143, 0.356]). Moreover, peer victimization was associated with a lower probability of a low trajectory and a higher probability of an increasing or high-decreasing-increasing trajectory, and these associations were mostly explained by common underlying genetic factors.
Conclusion |
Youth expressing (partly inherited) depressive symptoms may be at risk of peer victimization. However, increasing depressive symptoms in victims may be mitigated by other environmental factors except for those who enter adolescence with already high levels of depressive symptoms.
Le texte complet de cet article est disponible en PDF.Key words : adolescence, depression trajectories, gene-environment correlation, gene-environment interaction, peer victimization
Plan
| This study was funded by the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada (grant #435-2014-1536). Michel Boivin is supported by the Canada Research Chair program from the Canadian Institutes of Health Research. The funding sources had no involvement in the study design, the collection, analysis, and interpretation of data, the writing of the report, or the decision to submit the article for publication. |
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| Alain Girard, MSc, of the Université de Montréal, served as the statistical expert for this research. |
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| Author Contributions Conceptualization: Brendgen, Zheng, Vitaro, Boivin Data curation: Brendgen, Dionne Formal analysis: Zheng Funding acquisition: Brendgen, Vitaro, Dionne, Boivin Investigation: Brendgen Methodology: Zheng, Vitaro, Dionne, Boivin Project administration: Brendgen, Dionne Resources: Dionne Supervision: Brendgen, Dionne Validation: Brendgen Writing – original draft: Brendgen Writing – review and editing: Brendgen, Zheng, Vitaro, Dionne, Boivin |
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| The authors thank the twins and their families for participating in this study. |
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| Disclosure: Drs. Brendgen, Zheng, Vitaro, Dionne, and Boivin have reported no biomedical financial interests or potential conflicts of interest. |
Vol 62 - N° 2
P. 261-271 - février 2023 Retour au numéroBienvenue sur EM-consulte, la référence des professionnels de santé.
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