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Genetic and environmental contributions to the co-occurrence of depressive personality disorder and DSM-IV personality disorders
Authors:Ørstavik Ragnhild E  Kendler Kenneth S  Røysamb Espen  Czajkowski Nikolai  Tambs Kristian  Reichborn-Kjennerud Ted
Affiliation:Department of Mental Health, Norwegian Institute of Public Health, Norway. ragnhild.orstavik@fhi.no
Abstract:One of the main controversies with regard to depressive personality disorder (DPD) concerns the co-occurrence with the established DSM-IV personality disorders (PDs). The main aim of this study was to examine to what extent DPD and the DSM-IV PDs share genetic and environmental risk factors, using multivariate twin modeling. The DSM-IV Structured Interview for Personality was applied to 2,794 young adult twins. Paranoid PD from Cluster A, borderline PD from Cluster B, and all three PDs from Cluster C were independently and significantly associated with DPD in multiple regression analysis. The genetic correlations between DPD and the other PDs were strong (.53-.83), while the environmental correlations were moderate (.36-.40). Close to 50% of the total variance in DPD was disorder specific. However, only 5% was due to disorder-specific genetic factors, indicating that a substantial part of the genetic vulnerability to DPD also increases the vulnerability to other PDs.
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