The genetic relationship between cannabis and tobacco cigarette use in European- and African-American female twins and siblings

Drug Alcohol Depend. 2016 Jun 1:163:165-71. doi: 10.1016/j.drugalcdep.2016.04.011. Epub 2016 Apr 16.

Abstract

Background: Use of cigarettes and cannabis frequently co-occurs. We examine the role of genetic and environmental influences on variation in and covariation between tobacco cigarette and cannabis use across European-American (EA) and African-American (AA) women.

Methods: Data on lifetime cannabis and cigarette use were drawn from interviews of 956 AA and 3557 EA young adult female twins and non-twin same sex female full siblings. Twin modeling was used to decompose variance in and covariance between cigarette and cannabis use into additive genetic, shared, special twin and non-shared environmental sources.

Results: Cigarette use was more common in EAs (75.3%, 95% C.I. 73.8-76.7%) than AAs (64.2%, 95% C.I. 61.2-67.2%) while cannabis use was marginally more commonly reported by AAs (55.5%, 95% C.I. 52.5-58.8%) than EAs (52.4%, 95% C.I. 50.7-54.0%). Additive genetic factors were responsible for 43-66% of the variance in cigarette and cannabis use. Broad shared environmental factors (shared+special twin) played a more significant role in EA (23-29%) than AA (2-15%) women. In AA women, the influence of non-shared environment was more pronounced (42-45% vs. 11-19% in EA women). There was strong evidence for the same familial influences underlying use of both substances (rA=0.82-0.89; rC+T=0.70-0.75). Non-shared environmental factors were also correlated but less so (rE=0.48-0.66). No racial/ethnic differences were apparent in these sources of covariation.

Conclusion: Heritability of cigarette and cannabis use is comparable across racial/ethnic groups. Differences in the contribution of shared and non-shared environmental influences indicate that different factors may shape substance use in EA and AA women.

Keywords: Cannabis; Cigarette; Heritability; Initiation; Tobacco; Twin.

Publication types

  • Twin Study

MeSH terms

  • Adolescent
  • Black or African American / genetics*
  • Black or African American / psychology
  • Cannabis
  • Female
  • Humans
  • Longitudinal Studies
  • Marijuana Smoking / genetics*
  • Marijuana Smoking / psychology
  • Nicotiana
  • Siblings* / psychology
  • Smoking / genetics*
  • Smoking / psychology
  • Tobacco Use Disorder / genetics
  • Tobacco Use Disorder / psychology
  • Twins / genetics*
  • Twins / psychology
  • White People / genetics*
  • White People / psychology
  • Young Adult