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Active NON-SBIR/STTR RPGS NIH (US)

The role of remission in the intergenerational transmission of alcohol use disorder: Course, context, and offspring outcomes

$3.51M USD

Funder NATIONAL INSTITUTE ON ALCOHOL ABUSE AND ALCOHOLISM
Recipient Organization Washington University
Country United States
Start Date Aug 16, 2023
End Date May 31, 2027
Duration 1,384 days
Number of Grantees 2
Roles Principal Investigator; Co-Investigator
Data Source NIH (US)
Grant ID 10908659
Grant Description

Project Summary Abstract The economic, physical and emotional harms borne by AUD-affected families are great. 7.5 million U.S. children live with an AUD-affected parent and have increased risk for poverty, abuse and neglect in addition to heightened genetic risk for alcohol problems. Remission from AUDs is common, but this is seldom acknowledged in

research on the costs and consequences of AUDs. Up to 50% of individuals with lifetime AUDs experience remission, many within 14-years of AUD onset and many during prime child-bearing and child-rearing years. Our broad goal for this project is to comprehensively probe the remission phenotype and its role in the

intergenerational transmission of AUDs. We will use family-based data from the Collaborative Study on the Genetics of Alcoholism, a study ongoing since 1989 that recruits families with heightened risk for AUDs and more than 15,000 ever-drinkers. Because of COGA's high-risk design, there are sufficient numbers of AUD-

affected individuals (N=7724, 49%), and therefore available for remission, to permit this examination of remission within families and its effect on offspring outcomes. In Aim 1 we will use survival analysis and person-centered longitudinal methods to characterize the course of AUD and remission (chronic AUD, stable or relapsing

remission, movement through different types of remission [abstinent, non-abstinent]) and identify demographic and behavioral antecedents and sequalae of remission and relapse (marital status, children, employment, income, education, co-occurring substance and psychiatric disorders, treatment). In exploratory analysis, we will

construct a measure of family density of remission and test its association with AUD and remission. Because the genetic and environmental factors that influence AUD and remission do not entirely overlap, we expect this measure to have a small but significant association with the probability of not developing AUD and with the

likelihood of remission in individuals with AUD, independent of polygenic risk (PRS) for AUD. In Aim 2, we use biological parent-offspring pairs to characterize the familial environment of adolescent offspring (household income, parental marital status, childhood trauma) and variation in adolescent and adult offspring alcohol use

and AUD/remission as a function of parental AUD/remission. Sibling comparisons will delineate for whom parental remission is likely to have the greatest impact, while providing rigorous control for potential genetic and environmental confounders shared by siblings. The proposal is innovative in its focus on resilience, rather than

risk, in individuals and families; in its extension of the influence of parental AUD/remission into young and mid- adulthood; and in its use of a genetically-informed approach to understanding the role of remission in the intergenerational transmission of AUDs. Results can provide leverage for clinicians to encourage recovery in

patients who are or plan to become parents and will contribute to improved prevention and treatment efforts to reduce the intergenerational transmission of AUDs and associated problems.

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Washington University

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