ORIGINAL ARTICLE. Parental Age and Risk of Schizophrenia. been suggested to be a risk factor for schizophrenia in some studies.

Size: px
Start display at page:

Download "ORIGINAL ARTICLE. Parental Age and Risk of Schizophrenia. been suggested to be a risk factor for schizophrenia in some studies."

Transcription

1 Parental Age and Risk of Schizophrenia A Case-control Study ORIGINAL ARTICLE Majella Byrne, MSc, PhD; Esben Agerbo, MSc; Henrik Ewald, MD, DMSc; William W. Eaton, PhD; Preben Bo Mortensen, MD, DMSc Background: Advanced paternal age has been suggested as a possible risk factor for schizophrenia. It is not known whether this is explained by known risk factors for schizophrenia, including sibship characteristics, death of a parent before first hospital admission, season and place of birth, and family history of psychiatric illness, or by socioeconomic factors. We investigated the risk of schizophrenia associated with parental age, adjusting for known risk factors for schizophrenia, including family psychiatric history, and controlling for socioeconomic and demographic factors. Methods: We performed a national population, nested, case-control study based on Danish longitudinal register data. The sample included 7704 patients with an ICD-8 or ICD-10 diagnosis of schizophrenia admitted to a psychiatric facility between 1981 and 1998 in Denmark, and individually time-, age-, and sex-matched population controls, their parents, and siblings. The risk of schizophrenia associated with increasing parental age was investigated using conditional logistic regression and controlling for family socioeconomic and demographic factors and family psychiatric history. Results: Advanced paternal and maternal age was associated with increased risk of schizophrenia in univariate analyses. Controlling for socioeconomic factors and family psychiatric history, increased risk of schizophrenia was identified in those with a paternal age of 50 years or older. Sex-specific analyses revealed that the risk of schizophrenia was increased for males with fathers 55 years or older (incidence rate ratio [IRR], 2.10; 95% confidence interval [CI], ); for females, the risk associated with paternal age was substantial for fathers aged 50 to 54 years (IRR, 2.22; 95% CI, ) and 55 years or older (IRR, 3.53; 95% CI, ). Conclusion: Increased risk of schizophrenia was associated with advanced paternal age, particularly in females, lending support to the theory that de novo mutations, possibly X-linked, associated with increased parental age might be responsible for some cases of schizophrenia. Arch Gen Psychiatry. 2003;60: From the National Centre for Register-based Research, Aarhus University, Aarhus, Denmark (Drs Byrne and Mortensen and Mr Agerbo); Institute for Basic Psychiatric Research, Psychiatric Hospital, Aarhus, Risskov, Denmark (Dr Ewald); and Department of Mental Hygiene, School of Hygiene and Public Health, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, Md (Dr Eaton). ADVANCED PARENTAL age has been suggested to be a risk factor for schizophrenia in some studies. Both advanced maternal 1-4 and paternal age 2-8 have been reported to be associated with increased schizophrenia risk; however, most of the effect of maternal age has been accounted for by controlling for paternal age. Recently, Malaspina et al 8 suggested that de novo spermatogonia mutations that accompany advancing paternal age might be responsible for this association. The authors suggested that as many as two thirds of the cases with fathers older than 50 years could be attributable to paternal age, and the relative risk for schizophrenia increased monotonically with increasing age. For a variety of monogenic diseases, many cases are attributable to de novo mutations associated with advanced paternal age, 9,10 but there may also be increased risk for offspring of young fathers. 11 The mutation rate of the male germline has recently been estimated to be approximately twice that of the female germline, 12 although previous studies 13 have suggested it to be 5-fold higher, and it is known to be higher at specific disease loci. De novo mutations might help to account for the persistence of schizophrenia in the population despite reduced fecundity levels in persons with this disorder. 14 The aim of our study was 2-fold. First, we wanted to conduct an independent replication of the results of Malaspina and colleagues 8 in a national register-based sample. Second, we wanted to investigate whether the association between parental age and risk of schizophrenia could 673

2 be explained by any of the identified risk factors for schizophrenia, including family psychiatric history, 15,16 sibship characteristics, 17 death of a parent before admission, 5,18 season of birth, 14,19,20 and place of birth, 16,21 while assessing the possible confounding or modifying effect of socioeconomic factors (parental wealth, education, and marital status). METHODS The data were based on Danish longitudinal registers that were merged using a unique personal identification number known as the CPR (central person registration) number, which is used across all registration systems in Denmark. All live-born children and new residents in Denmark are assigned a unique personal identification number, and information is kept under this number in all national registers, thus ensuring accurate linkage of information between registers without the necessity to reveal a person s identity. The CPR registry was instigated in Parents date of birth was identified through the CPR register. The Danish Psychiatric Central Register has monitored all psychiatric inpatient facilities in Denmark since There are no private psychiatric facilities in Denmark, and all treatment is free of charge. All diagnoses were according to International Classification of Diseases, 8th Revision (ICD-8) 24 until December 31, 1993, and according to International Classification of Diseases, 10th Revision (ICD-10) 25 beginning January 1, Parental and sibling psychiatric information relates to the status just before the date of first contact of the case. In this manner, only family members who are affected before this date contribute information to the calculation of the risk associated with family history. The socioeconomic data were obtained from the Integrated Database for Longitudinal Labour Market Research, which includes linked information on employees and establishments 26 and for which there is continuous annual information available from 1980 to The register covers the total population and includes detailed socioeconomic information. We obtained information on parental education, wealth status, and marital status. We also obtained information on number of siblings as a proxy for family size. For our purposes, a random 5% of this register in addition to the patients and their families was used as the sample base from which the controls and their families were extracted. STUDY DESIGN A time-matched, nested, case-control design 27 was used to select the control sample. For each case, 25 controls were randomly selected from a subsample of all available controls fulfilling the matching criteria: born in the same calendar year, same age in days, same sex, no admissions to a psychiatric facility in Denmark, and alive on the date that the case was first admitted. STUDY POPULATION The study sample was composed of all persons older than 15 years admitted to a Danish psychiatric facility for the first time between 1981 and 1998 with a diagnosis of schizophrenia and known maternal identity. A total of 7704 persons with schizophrenia were identified, 92% had links to a father (that is, paternity was not known or declared in 8%), and 66% were male. The control sample consisted of individuals, representing 25 controls per case. Of the controls, 96% had links to a father. PARENTAL AGE We defined parental age in a similar manner to Malaspina et al. 8 Paternal age was categorized into the following age groups: younger than 20 years, 20 through 24 years, 25 through 29 years, 30 through 34 years, 35 through 39 years, 40 through 44 years, 45 through 49 years, and 50 years or older. Maternal age was defined as younger than 20 years, 20 through 24 years, 25 through 29 years, 30 through 34 years, 35 through 39 years, and 40 years or older. Because we had a substantial number of patients and controls, we were in a position to investigate the effect of paternal and maternal age on the risk for schizophrenia in greater detail than Malaspina et al. 8 We extended the age categories to 50 through 54 years and 55 years or older for paternal age and 40 through 45 years and 45 years or older for maternal age. FAMILY PSYCHIATRIC HISTORY It was possible to obtain information relating to family history of psychiatric contact for mothers, fathers, and siblings by linking with the Danish Psychiatric Central Register. In line with previous studies using similar data, 15,16 history of psychiatric disorders in family members was defined in a hierarchical manner as follows: (1) schizophrenia, schizo-affective disorder, and schizophrenia-like psychosis (ICD-8 codes: 295, 295.7, 297, , ; ICD-10 codes: F20, F25, F21-F24, F28, F29); (2) bipolar illness and other affective illness (ICD-8 codes: 296.1, 296.3, 296, 300.4; ICD-10 codes: F30, F31, F34.0, F32-F39) and no history of disorders in category 1; and (3) other psychiatric disorder (any other diagnosis) but no history of disorders in either category 1 or 2. In addition, and not included in the hierarchy, we assessed the risk associated with a history of substance abuse disorders (ICD-8 codes: 303, 304; ICD-10 codes: F10.2, F11.2, F12.2, F13.2, F14.2, F15.2, F16.2, F17.2, F18.2, F19.2) and a history of suicide for mother, father, and siblings. SOCIOECONOMIC AND DEMOGRAPHIC VARIABLES AND SEASON OF BIRTH Socioeconomic and demographic variables included information about parental education level (organized according to 4 categories: basic/primary education, high school education and vocational training, university level education, and no available information) and information on parental wealth (organized into quartiles based on the distribution of these variables in the 5% sample of the Integrated Database for Longitudinal Labour Market Research). Other variables included were parental marital status, defined as single or married (including cohabiting); death of a parent or sibling before first hospital admission (not due to suicide); reference to father at birth; number of siblings (0, 1, 2, or 3 or more); and place of birth (defined as the capital [Copenhagen], capital suburbs, provincial city [population ], provincial town [population ], rural area, and birth outside Denmark, according to Pedersen and Mortensen 16 ). All variables were treated categorically and entered into the analysis as covariates. We modeled month of birth as 11 dummy variables, with June as the reference category. The interaction between parental age and season of birth was modeled. STATISTICAL ANALYSIS The data were analyzed in a conditional logistic regression model using the PhReg procedure of SAS statistical software version 8.1 (SAS Institute Inc, Cary, NC), 28 and asymptotic 95% con- 674

3 Table 1. Mean Age at Onset and Sex Distribution for Each Category of Parental Age Age, y Cases, No. (%) Controls, No. (%) Mean (SD) Age at Onset, y Female Cases, No. (%) Male Cases, No. (%) Paternal age* (2.5) 3394 (1.8) (5.5) 47 (26.5) 130 (73.5) (20.1) (20.5) (5.9) 461 (32.4) 963 (67.6) (31.8) (33.7) (5.7) 784 (34.7) 1473 (65.3) (23.3) (23.4) (6.0) 557 (33.7) 1097 (66.3) (12.2) (12.2) (6.1) 315 (36.2) 555 (63.8) (6.3) (5.5) (5.9) 156 (34.7) 293 (65.3) (2.4) 3794 (2.1) (6.2) 51 (30.2) 118 (69.8) (0.9) 1153 (0.6) (6.5) 29 (47.5) 32 (52.5) (0.5) 319 (0.2) (4.9) 11 (30.6) 25 (69.4) Total 7097 (100) (100) 2411 (34.0) 4686 (66.0) Maternal age (9.6) (9.0) (5.6) 216 (29.0) 526 (72.0) (32.9) (34.5) (5.9) 838 (33.0) 1696 (67.0) (30.7) (31.5) (5.8) 839 (35.5) 1523 (64.5) (16.9) (16.3) (6.2) 453 (35.0) 848 (65.0) (7.4) (6.8) (6.3) 189 (33.0) 384 (67.0) (2.2) 3310 (1.7) (5.8) 59 (35.0) 110 (65.0) (0.3) 315 (0.2) (6.8) 3 (13.0) 20 (87.0) Total 7704 (100) (100) 2597 (33.7) 5107 (66.3) *For patients with schizophrenia and controls, paternal age was missing for 607 and 8035 fathers, respectively, for whom there was no information. fidence intervals (CIs) were calculated. Variables were assessed the last full year before the first admission ever to a psychiatric hospital irrespective of whether schizophrenia was diagnosed at first admission or later. The method of sampling controls, that is, risk set sampling, means that the odds ratio estimate in the analyses can be interpreted as an incidence rate ratio (IRR) between exposed and unexposed categories. 29 Sex interactions were modeled for each category of paternal and maternal age. We conducted analyses separately for males and females as a result of significant sex interactions with parental age. RESULTS PARENTAL AGE In Table 1, the number and percentage of cases and controls in each category of parental age are presented, along with the mean age at onset of cases in each category and the sex distribution. We conducted a series of models of increasing complexity, the results of which are described in Table 2. In Table 2, the age categories according to Malaspina et al 8 are presented along with the extended age categories. For all analyses, the reference group was parental age of 20 through 24 years. In Table 2, the IRRs for the unadjusted models are presented, where paternal (model 1a) and maternal (model 1b) age groups were modeled in separate univariate models (all models, including paternal age, controlled for whether there was a reference to a father). A significantly increased risk of schizophrenia was associated with paternal age younger than 20 years and with all age groups 40 years or older (model 1a). A significantly increased risk was associated with maternal age younger than 20 years and with all age groups 30 years or older (model 1b). Paternal age and maternal age were then entered into the same model (model 2) to adjust the IRRs for the effects of age of the other parent. Once paternal age was controlled for in the model, there seemed to be no significant overall association between maternal age and risk of schizophrenia. A significant association remained for the paternal age groups of 40 through 44 years and 50 years or older. The next step was to introduce the psychiatric history of both parents into the model to control for the effect of psychiatric history on the association between parental age and risk of schizophrenia (model 3). For paternal age a significant association remained for the age groups of 40 through 44 years and 50 years or older. We found a weak but significant association between the maternal age group of 30 through 34 years and risk of schizophrenia and a significant association for the maternal age group of 40 years or older. In the next model (model 4), we included the socioeconomic and demographic factors that might independently account for the relationship between parental age and risk of schizophrenia, including parental education, wealth, marital status, history of death before the case was first admitted, place of birth of cases and controls, family size, and, in addition to family psychiatric history, history of suicide and substance abuse in a parent or sibling and reference to father. These data were forced into the model regardless of significance of the estimates. Controlling for this range of factors (possible confounders), there remained a significantly increased risk in those with a paternal age of 50 years or older. We reanalyzed the data to include only those cases (n=5413) and controls (n=118930) without a family history of schizophrenia or other psychiatric admissions, and these are presented in Table 2 (model 5). The results are similar to those of model 4. When the risks were estimated in the extended parental age groups (paternal age, years and 55 years; maternal age, years and 45 years), the increased risk was most marked in the oldest paternal age group. The increased risk of schizophrenia associated with 675

4 Table 2. Incidence Rate Ratios (IRRs) for Schizophrenia Associated With Parental Age Age, y Unadjusted Model (Model 1)* Adjusted for Age of Both Parents (Model 2) IRR (95% Confidence Interval) Adjusted for Age and Psychiatric History of Both Parents (Model 3) Full Model Adjusted for Family Psychiatric History and Socioeconomic Factors (Model 4) Full Model, Family History Negative Only (Model 5) Paternal age ( ) 1.14 ( ) 1.01 ( ) 1.04 ( ) 1.05 ( ) 1.00 (Referent) 1.00 (Referent) ( ) 0.97 ( ) 0.98 ( ) 0.99 ( ) 1.01 ( ) ( ) 1.01 ( ) 1.02 ( ) 1.04 ( ) 1.03 ( ) ( ) 1.01 ( ) 1.00 ( ) 1.02 ( ) 1.06 ( ) ( ) 1.16 ( ) 1.14 ( ) 1.15 ( ) 1.21 ( ) ( ) 1.14 ( ) 1.10 ( ) 1.09 ( ) 1.22 ( ) ( ) 1.65 ( ) 1.64 ( ) 1.51 ( ) 1.61 ( ) ( ) 1.32 ( ) 1.29 ( ) 1.22 ( ) 1.33 ( ) ( ) 2.71 ( ) 2.76 ( ) 2.45 ( ) 2.42 ( ) Maternal age ( ) 1.07 ( ) 1.04 ( ) 1.03 ( ) 1.04 ( ) 1.00 (Referent) 1.00 (Referent) ( ) 1.03 ( ) 1.04 ( ) 1.02 ( ) 1.05 ( ) ( ) 1.06 ( ) 1.09 ( ) 1.05 ( ) 1.08 ( ) ( ) 1.05 ( ) 1.11 ( ) 1.07 ( ) 1.08 ( ) ( ) 1.15 ( ) 1.23 ( ) 1.18 ( ) 1.21 ( ) ( ) 1.12 ( ) 1.20 ( ) 1.16 ( ) 1.20 ( ) ( ) 1.45 ( ) 1.55 ( ) 1.41 ( ) 1.43 ( ) *Two separate models were conducted: model 1a for paternal age and model 1b for maternal age. Model adjusted for parental education, wealth, marital status, death before case admission not by suicide, family psychiatric history, history of suicide in parent or sibling, reference to father, place of birth, and sibship size. Includes older age groups. paternal age of 55 years or older remained significant after adjustment for the range of familial socioeconomic variables (model 4), although the association for the paternal age category of 50 through 54 years remained relatively unchanged in magnitude. The different models uniformly suggested a thresholdlike effect for the oldest category of fathers rather than a monotonic association as suggested by Malaspina et al, 8 and this finding was not modified by any of the other factors included in our study. In fact, it can be seen in Table 2 that the estimates changed little between models. The estimated IRR for any age category within a model was contained within the 95% CIs of the respective estimate from the other models. EFFECT OF SEX AND AGE AT FIRST ADMISSION We investigated the interactions between parental age in each category and sex of the patients and between parental age and age at first admission of the patients. We also included a 3-way interaction composed of age group of parent, sex, and age at first admission. Age at first admission was entered into the analysis as a meancentered variable (the difference between age at first admission and mean age at first admission). 15 We did not find any interactions between age at first admission and parental age in this sample. Significant sex interactions were observed for the paternal age groups of 35 through 39 years and 50 years or older, the extended age group of 50 through 54 years, and the maternal age group of 45 years or older. Analyses were conducted separately for males and females and the results are displayed in Table 3. The risk of schizophrenia was significantly increased in the 35- through 39-year age group of paternal age for females only. However, this effect was no longer significant once age of the other parent was controlled for (model 2; the models displayed in Table 3 are named to coincide with those in Table 2; for consistency, model 3 is not presented on this table). The risk associated with paternal age of 50 years or older was significantly increased for females in models 2 and 4. In the paternal age group of 50 through 54 years, the significant effect of paternal age on increased schizophrenia risk was present exclusively for females. The risk was higher for females in the paternal age group of 55 years or older than for males (model 4: IRR, 3.53; 95% CI, ; vs IRR, 2.10; 95% CI, ); however, the interaction was not significant. In terms of maternal age, there was a significant increase in the risk for males with mothers 45 years or older but not for females in all models. The estimates associated with the extended maternal age group (age, 45 years) were based on only a few cases (n=3 females; n=20 males). There was no significant increase in the risk of schizophrenia for any month of birth. We did not find any significant interaction between month of birth and parental age. COMMENT In this national, population-based, epidemiologic sample, controlling for a range of familial socioeconomic and psychiatric factors, advanced paternal age ( 50 years) was 676

5 associated with an increased risk of schizophrenia. In addition, we identified a sex effect, in which the increased risk associated with advanced paternal age was particularly prominent for females. A particular strength of our study was the ability to control for the presence of psychiatric disorders in the parents and siblings and for possible confounding due to family socioeconomic factors, family size, and whether a parent had died before the first hospital admission. The data are register based and so are bound by the same limitations of all register-based research, including the fact that the cases represent treated incidence cases. In our analyses, unlike that of Malaspina et al, 8 in which the authors found a monotonic relationship between paternal age and risk of schizophrenia, the increased risk was confined to the older ( 50 years) paternal ages in our final model (model 4). However, in our study, we were in a position to control for factors that Malaspina et al 8 could not control for, namely, parental psychiatric history and information relating to the death of the parents before admission. We identified a U- shaped distribution in the risk for schizophrenia associated with parental age in the initial models; however, after controlling for family psychiatric history and social factors, this U shape was no longer visible for paternal age, and only a weak and nonsignificant effect remained for maternal age. Furthermore, the present study did not find an increased risk in the relatively younger groups of parents. It is possible that environmental and genetic risk factors differ between the Danish population investigated by us and the Israeli population. 8 A simple explanation might include the relatively higher ambient temperatures in Israel, since heat exposure may increase the exposure of spermatozoa to mutagenic metabolites, 30 leading to more and earlier mutations among Israeli fathers and a paternal effect in younger age groups as well. A variety of possible explanations for the association between risk of schizophrenia and paternal age have been discussed, including an increase in the rate of de novo genetic mutations in older fathers, attributes of the parents that lead to marriage at an older age than normal that are related to schizophrenia in the offspring, 5 and the adverse psychological consequences of losing a parent by death because of the parents increased age. 5 We examined the risk of schizophrenia associated with the death of a parent other than by suicide; however, no increase in risk was identified in the final model. This suggests that the psychological distress caused by the death of an aging parent does not account for the relationship between risk of schizophrenia and advanced paternal age. Although we could not control for birth order in this sample, we controlled for sibship size. In a previous study, sibship size but not birth order was associated with increased risk of schizophrenia. 17 We found an independent, small but significant increase in the risk of schizophrenia among those from families with 3 or more siblings compared with being an only child (IRR, 1.15; 95% CI, ), controlling for family history of psychiatric diagnoses in parents and siblings and socioeconomic factors. This finding suggests that the advanced paternal age effect is independent of factors operating in larger families, such as environmental exposure, Table 3. Sex-Specific Estimates of the Incidence Rate Ratios (IRRs) for Schizophrenia by Parental Age Age, y Unadjusted Model (Model 1)* IRR (95% Confidence Interval) Adjusted for Age of Other Parent (Model 2) Full Model Adjusted for Family Psychiatric History and Socioeconomic Factors (Model 4) Paternal age Males ( ) 1.25 ( ) 1.10 ( ) ( ) 0.95 ( ) 0.97 ( ) ( ) 1.02 ( ) 1.05 ( ) ( ) 0.96 ( ) 0.97 ( ) ( ) 1.11 ( ) 1.09 ( ) ( ) 1.15 ( ) 1.10 ( ) ( ) 1.31 ( ) 1.19 ( ) ( ) 0.90 ( ) 0.85 ( ) ( ) 2.50 ( ) 2.10 ( ) Females ( ) 0.94 ( ) 0.90 ( ) ( ) 1.00 ( ) 1.04 ( ) ( ) 1.00 ( ) 1.02 ( ) ( ) 1.10 ( ) 1.13 ( ) ( ) 1.26 ( ) 1.29 ( ) ( ) 1.11 ( ) 1.07 ( ) ( ) 2.57 ( ) 2.44 ( ) ( ) 2.45 ( ) 2.22 ( ) ( ) 3.22 ( ) 3.53 ( ) Maternal age Males ( ) 1.12 ( ) 1.07 ( ) ( ) 2.16 ( ) 0.98 ( ) ( ) 1.04 ( ) 1.02 ( ) ( ) 1.09 ( ) 1.09 ( ) ( ) 1.22 ( ) 1.17 ( ) ( ) 1.14 ( ) 1.11 ( ) ( ) 2.16 ( ) 1.86 ( ) Females ( ) 0.98 ( ) 0.95 ( ) ( ) 0.46 ( ) 1.10 ( ) ( ) 1.10 ( ) 1.10 ( ) ( ) 0.98 ( ) 1.02 ( ) ( ) 1.02 ( ) 1.20 ( ) ( ) 1.08 ( ) 1.26 ( ) ( ) 0.46 ( ) 0.61 ( ) *Two separate models were conducted: model 1a for paternal age and model 1b for maternal age. Model adjusted for parental education, wealth, marital status, death before case admission not by suicide, family psychiatric history, history of suicide in parent or sibling, reference to father, place of birth, and sibship size. Significant interaction between sex and parental age category. Includes older age groups. perhaps to common infections in childhood, that may increase the risk of schizophrenia. 17 We found a sex difference insofar as there was a significant increase in the risk of schizophrenia in females with older fathers in all age groups 50 years or older ( 50 years, years, 55 years) compared with males, for whom the increased risk was confined to the 55-year- 677

6 or-older age group. Males had an increased risk associated with older mothers ( 45 years); however, the estimates were based on a small sample size. The de novo mutations that occur with advancing age in parents not only might be point mutations but also could involve trinucleotide repeated expansions, imprinting, or small structural chromosomal rearrangements. 13 The data from the present study suggest that the parental effect is particularly related to paternal age in female cases. Therefore, a gene on the X chromosome might be involved, because these are always passed from fathers to daughters. It is well-known that the X chromosome contains a relatively high number of genes expressed in the central nervous system and that the gene for many diseases with cognitive impairment are located on the X chromosomes. Furthermore, a few linkage studies have suggested possible risk loci for schizophrenia on the X chromosome. 31 However, the increased mutation rate in males can occur on 2 autosomes in each chromosome pair but only on 1 X chromosome, at least outside the pseudoautosomal region. Imprinted autosomal genes may also explain that an increased risk depends on the sex of the parent. In our sample, the effect was not restricted to those with a family history of psychiatric illness. When we reanalyzed the data, including only those cases (n=5413) and controls (n=118930) without a family history of schizophrenia or any other psychiatric disorder, the results were similar (Table 2, model 5), indicating that the effect of parental age is not restricted to those with or without a family history of schizophrenia or other psychiatric disorders in this sample and suggesting that family history of psychiatric disorders does not explain the association. Our findings support the theory that de novo mutations might occur in the offspring of older parents, particularly fathers, leading to an increased risk of schizophrenia and that this might help explain the fact that schizophrenia persists in the population despite reduced fertility levels. 14 However, this effect seems to be restricted to fathers older than 50 years. The findings of interactions between sex and age of parent of origin lead to speculation about involvement of de novo genetic mutations occurring on the X chromosome in the etiology of schizophrenia, particularly in the female offspring of older fathers. However, males with older fathers ( 55 years) also had an increased risk. Focusing efforts on a specific chromosome may facilitate the final identification of risk genes possibly involved in the parental age effect. Such a risk gene might either be a gene of importance for brain development and function or might predispose to de novo mutations in such genes by causing decreased DNA repair and/or increased environmental susceptibility. Submitted for publication May 7, 2002; final revision received December 20, 2002; accepted January 14, This study was funded by the Stanley Medical Research Institute and by grant MH53188 from the National Institutes of Mental Health, Bethesda, Md. The National Centre for Register-based Research is supported by the Danish National Research Foundation, Copenhagen, Denmark. Corresponding author and reprints: Majella Byrne, MSc, PhD, National Centre for Register-based Research, Aarhus University, Taasingegade 1, Aarhus 8000 C, Denmark ( mb@ncrr.dk). REFERENCES 1. Goodman N. Relation between maternal age at parturition and incidence of mental disorder in the offspring. Br J Prev Soc Med. 1957;11: Johanson E. A study of schizophrenia in the male. Acta Psychiatr Scand Suppl. 1958;33(suppl 125): Gregory I. An analysis of family data on 1,000 patients admitted to a Canadian mental hospital. Acta Genet Stat Med. 1959;9: Bojanovsky J, Gerylovova A. The relation of schizophrenia to the age of parents of the patient. Nervenarzt. 1967;38: Hare EH, Moran PA. Raised parental age in psychiatric patients: evidence for the constitutional hypothesis. Br J Psychiatry. 1979;134: Kinnell HG. Parental age in schizophrenia [letter]. Br J Psychiatry. 1983;142: Raschka LB. Parental age and schizophrenia. Magyar Andrologia. 1998;3: Malaspina D, Harlap S, Fennig S, Heiman D, Nahon D, Feldman D, Susser ES. Advancing paternal age and the risk of schizophrenia. Arch Gen Psychiatry. 2001; 58: Malaspina D. Paternal factors and schizophrenia risk: de novo mutations and imprinting. Schizophr Bull. 2001;27: Malaspina D, Corcoran C, Fahim C, Berman A, Harkavy-Friedman J, Yale S, Goetz D, Goetz R, Harlap S, Gorman J. Paternal age and sporadic schizophrenia: evidence for de novo mutations. Am J Med Genet. 2002;114: McIntosh GC, Olshan AF, Baird PA. Paternal age and the risk of birth defects in offspring. Epidemiology. 1995;6: Lander ES, Linton LM, Birren B, Nusbaum C, Zody MC, Baldwin J, et al. Initial sequencing and analysis of the human genome. Nature. 2001;409: Crow JF. The origins, patterns and implications of human spontaneous mutation. Nat Rev Genet. 2000;1: McGrath JJ, Hearle J, Jenner L, Plant K, Drummond A, Barkla JM. The fertility and fecundity of patients with psychoses. Acta Psychiatr Scand. 1999;99: Byrne M, Agerbo E, Mortensen PB. Family history of psychiatric disorders and age at first contact in schizophrenia: an epidemiological study. Br J Psychiatry. 2002;181(suppl 43):S19-S Pedersen CB, Mortensen PB. Family history, place and season of birth as risk factors for schizophrenia in Denmark: a replication and reanalysis. Br J Psychiatry. 2001;179: Westergaard T, Mortensen PB, Pedersen CB, Wohlfahrt J, Melbye M. Exposure to prenatal and childhood infections and the risk of schizophrenia: suggestions from a study of sibship characteristics and influenza prevalence. Arch Gen Psychiatry. 1999;56: Agid O, Shapira B, Zislin J, Ritsner M, Hanin B, Murad H, Troudart T, Bloch M, Heresco-Levy U, Lerer B. Environment and vulnerability to major psychiatric illness: a case control study of early parental loss in major depression, bipolar disorder and schizophrenia. Mol Psychiatry. 1999;4: Crow TJ. Mutation and psychosis: a suggested explanation of seasonality of birth. Psychol Med. 1987;17: Torrey EF, Miller J, Rawlings R, Yolken RH. Seasonality of births in schizophrenia and bipolar disorder: a review of the literature. Schizophr Res. 1997;28: Mortensen PB, Pedersen CB, Westergaard T, Wohlfahrt J, Ewald H, Mors O, Andersen PK, Melbye M. Effects of family history and place and season of birth on the risk of schizophrenia. N Engl J Med. 1999;340: Malig C. The civil registration system in Denmark. Tech Pap Int Inst Vital Regist Stat. 1996;66: Munk-Jorgensen P, Mortensen PB. The Danish Psychiatric Central Register. Dan Med Bull. 1997;44: World Health Organization. Manual of the International Statistical Classification of Diseases, Injuries, and Causes of Death (ICD-8). Geneva, Switzerland: World Health Organization; World Health Organization. The ICD-10 Classification of Mental and Behavioural Disorders: Clinical Descriptions and Diagnostic Guidelines. Geneva, Switzerland: World Health Organization; Danmarks Statistiks. IDA-en Integreret Database for Arbejdsmarkedsforskning. København: Danmarks Statistik Trykkeri; Clayton D, Hills M. Statistical Models in Epidemiology. New York, NY: Oxford University Press; SAS Institute Inc. The PhReg procedure. In: SAS/STAT User s Guide, Version 8. Cary, NC: SAS Institute Inc; 1999: Borgan O, Langholz B. Nonparametric estimation of relative mortality from nested case-control studies. Biometrics. 1993;49: Setchell BP. The Parkes Lecture: heat and the testis. J Reprod Fertil. 1998;114: Baron M. Genetics of schizophrenia and the new millennium: progress and pitfalls. Am J Hum Genet. 2001;68:

Cite this article as: BMJ, doi: /bmj (published 22 June 2004)

Cite this article as: BMJ, doi: /bmj (published 22 June 2004) Cite this article as: BMJ, doi:10.1136/bmj.38133.622488.63 (published 22 June 2004) Change in suicide rates for patients with schizophrenia in Denmark, 1981-97: nested case-control study Merete Nordentoft,

More information

ORIGINAL ARTICLE. Individual and Familial Risk Factors for Bipolar Affective Disorders in Denmark

ORIGINAL ARTICLE. Individual and Familial Risk Factors for Bipolar Affective Disorders in Denmark ORIGINAL ARTICLE Individual and Familial Risk Factors for Bipolar Affective Disorders in Denmark Preben Bo Mortensen, DrMedSc; C. B. Pedersen, MSc; M. Melbye, DrMedSc; O. Mors, PhD; H. Ewald, DrMedSc Background:

More information

EFFECTS OF FAMILY HISTORY AND PLACE AND SEASON OF BIRTH ON THE RISK OF SCHIZOPHRENIA

EFFECTS OF FAMILY HISTORY AND PLACE AND SEASON OF BIRTH ON THE RISK OF SCHIZOPHRENIA EFFECTS OF FAMILY HISTORY AND PLACE AND SEASON OF BIRTH ON THE RISK OF SCHIZOPHRENIA EFFECTS OF FAMILY HISTORY AND PLACE AND SEASON OF BIRTH ON THE RISK OF SCHIZOPHRENIA PREBEN BO MORTENSEN, D.M.SC., CARSTEN

More information

Cite this article as: BMJ, doi: /bmj (published 22 October 2004)

Cite this article as: BMJ, doi: /bmj (published 22 October 2004) Paternal age and : a population based cohort study Attila Sipos, Finn Rasmussen, Glynn Harrison, Per Tynelius, Glyn Lewis, David A Leon, David Gunnell Abstract Objective To investigate the association

More information

ORIGINAL ARTICLE. Family History of Psychiatric Illness as a Risk Factor for Schizoaffective Disorder

ORIGINAL ARTICLE. Family History of Psychiatric Illness as a Risk Factor for Schizoaffective Disorder ORIGINAL ARTICLE Family History of Psychiatric Illness as a Risk Factor for Schizoaffective Disorder A Danish Register-Based Cohort Study Thomas Munk Laursen, MSc; Rodrigo Labouriau, PhD; Rasmus W. Licht,

More information

Exposure to Prenatal and Childhood Infections and the Risk of Schizophrenia

Exposure to Prenatal and Childhood Infections and the Risk of Schizophrenia ORIGINAL ARTICLE Exposure to Prenatal and Childhood Infections and the Risk of Schizophrenia Suggestions From a Study of Sibship Characteristics and Influenza Prevalence Tine Westergaard, MD; Preben B.

More information

T he importance of familial aggregation of suicides and

T he importance of familial aggregation of suicides and RESEARCH REPORT Midlife suicide risk, partner s psychiatric illness, spouse and child bereavement by suicide or other modes of death: a gender specific study Esben Agerbo...... Correspondence to: Dr E

More information

Infections and autoimmunity as risk factors for mental disorders

Infections and autoimmunity as risk factors for mental disorders C O M M O N T h r e a d s N e w Yo r k M a r c h 2 0 1 8 Infections and autoimmunity as risk factors for mental disorders - Danish nationwide register and biobank studies M.D., Ph.D. Copenhagen University

More information

Association Between Parental Hospital-Treated Infection and the Risk of Schizophrenia in Adolescence and Early Adulthood

Association Between Parental Hospital-Treated Infection and the Risk of Schizophrenia in Adolescence and Early Adulthood Page 1 of 14 www.medscape.com Association Between Parental Hospital-Treated Infection and the Risk of Schizophrenia in Adolescence and Early Adulthood Philip R. Nielsen, Thomas M. Laursen, Preben B. Mortensen

More information

Jinliang Zhu, Carsten Obel, Jørn Olsen Department of Public Health, University of Aarhus

Jinliang Zhu, Carsten Obel, Jørn Olsen Department of Public Health, University of Aarhus Parental smoking during pregnancy and short- and long-term adverse outcomes in offspring: Using data from ad hoc birth cohorts and registers in Denmark Jinliang Zhu, Carsten Obel, Jørn Olsen Department

More information

Infections and autoimmunity as risk factors for mental disorders

Infections and autoimmunity as risk factors for mental disorders Common threads New York March 2018 Infections and autoimmunity as risk factors for mental disorders - Danish nationwide register and biobank studies M.D., Ph.D. The Danish Registers Prescription Database

More information

A Comprehensive Assessment of Parental Age and Psychiatric Disorders

A Comprehensive Assessment of Parental Age and Psychiatric Disorders Research Original Investigation A Comprehensive Assessment of Parental Age and Psychiatric Disorders John J. McGrath, MD; Liselotte Petersen, PhD; Esben Agerbo, DrMedSc; Ole Mors, MD; Preben Bo Mortensen,

More information

Ph.D. thesis. Thomas Munk Laursen

Ph.D. thesis. Thomas Munk Laursen A register based epidemiological description of risk factors and outcomes for major psychiatric disorders, focusing on a comparison between bipolar affective disorder and schizophrenia Ph.D. thesis Thomas

More information

Psychological Medicine, 2003, 33, f 2003 Cambridge University Press DOI: /S Printed in the United Kingdom

Psychological Medicine, 2003, 33, f 2003 Cambridge University Press DOI: /S Printed in the United Kingdom Psychological Medicine, 2003, 33, 723 731. f 2003 Cambridge University Press DOI: 10.1017/S0033291703007591 Printed in the United Kingdom Association between psychotic disorder and urban place of birth

More information

Supplementary Online Content

Supplementary Online Content Supplementary Online Content Mok PLH, Pedersen CB, Springate D, et al. Parental psychiatric disease and risks of attempted suicide and violent criminal offending in offspring: a population-based cohort

More information

Childhood Vaccination and Type 1 Diabetes

Childhood Vaccination and Type 1 Diabetes The new england journal of medicine original article Childhood Vaccination and Type 1 Diabetes Anders Hviid, M.Sc., Michael Stellfeld, M.D., Jan Wohlfahrt, M.Sc., and Mads Melbye, M.D., Ph.D. abstract

More information

Research. Original Investigation. nongenetic factors but disentangling these factors is difficult.

Research. Original Investigation. nongenetic factors but disentangling these factors is difficult. Research Original Investigation Polygenic Risk Score, Parental Socioeconomic Status, Family History of Psychiatric Disorders, and the Risk for Schizophrenia A Danish Population-Based Study and Meta-analysis

More information

Effects of familial risk factors and place of birth on the risk of autism: a nationwide register-based study

Effects of familial risk factors and place of birth on the risk of autism: a nationwide register-based study Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry 46:9 (2005), pp 963 971 doi: 10.1111/j.1469-7610.2004.00391.x Effects of familial risk factors and place of birth on the risk of autism: a nationwide register-based

More information

ORIGINAL ARTICLE. Risks and Predictors of Readmission for a Mental Disorder During the Postpartum Period

ORIGINAL ARTICLE. Risks and Predictors of Readmission for a Mental Disorder During the Postpartum Period ORIGINAL ARTICLE Risks and Predictors of Readmission for a Mental Disorder During the Postpartum Period Trine Munk-Olsen, PhD; Thomas Munk Laursen, PhD; Tamar Mendelson, PhD; Carsten B. Pedersen, MSc;

More information

HIGH PATERNAL AGE AND RISK OF PSYCHIATRIC DISORDERS IN OFFSPRING

HIGH PATERNAL AGE AND RISK OF PSYCHIATRIC DISORDERS IN OFFSPRING From the Department of Medical Epidemiology and Biostatistics Karolinska Institutet, Stockholm, Sweden HIGH PATERNAL AGE AND RISK OF PSYCHIATRIC DISORDERS IN OFFSPRING Emma Frans Stockholm 2013 All previously

More information

Common genetic determinants of schizophrenia and bipolar disorder in Swedish families: a population-based study

Common genetic determinants of schizophrenia and bipolar disorder in Swedish families: a population-based study Common genetic determinants of schizophrenia and bipolar disorder in Swedish families: a population-based study Paul Lichtenstein, Benjamin H Yip, Camilla Björk, Yudi Pawitan, Tyrone D Cannon, Patrick

More information

Author Appendix Contents. Appendix A. Model fitting results for Autism and ADHD by 8 years old

Author Appendix Contents. Appendix A. Model fitting results for Autism and ADHD by 8 years old 1 Author Appendix Contents Appendix A. Model fitting results for Autism and ADHD by 8 years old Appendix B. Results for models controlling for paternal age at first childbearing while estimating associations

More information

Posttraumatic Stress Disorder and Suicidal Behavior: Current Understanding and Future Directions

Posttraumatic Stress Disorder and Suicidal Behavior: Current Understanding and Future Directions Posttraumatic Stress Disorder and Suicidal Behavior: Current Understanding and Future Directions Jaimie L. Gradus, DSc, MPH Epidemiologist, National Center for PTSD, VA Boston Healthcare System Associate

More information

Recurrence of Autism Spectrum Disorders in Fulland Half-Siblings and Trends Over Time A Population-Based Cohort Study

Recurrence of Autism Spectrum Disorders in Fulland Half-Siblings and Trends Over Time A Population-Based Cohort Study Research Original Investigation Recurrence of Autism Spectrum Disorders in Fulland Half-Siblings and Trends Over Time A Population-Based Cohort Study Therese K. Grønborg, MSc; Diana E. Schendel, PhD; Erik

More information

How to measure mental health in the general population? Reiner Rugulies

How to measure mental health in the general population? Reiner Rugulies How to measure mental health in the general population? Reiner Rugulies National Research Centre for the Working Environment, Denmark Department of Public Health and Department of Psychology, University

More information

ORIGINAL ARTICLE. Psychiatric Disorders With Postpartum Onset. Possible Early Manifestations of Bipolar Affective Disorders

ORIGINAL ARTICLE. Psychiatric Disorders With Postpartum Onset. Possible Early Manifestations of Bipolar Affective Disorders ONLINE FIRST ORIGINAL ARTICLE Psychiatric Disorders With Postpartum Onset Possible Early Manifestations of Bipolar Affective Disorders Trine Munk-Olsen, PhD; Thomas Munk Laursen, PhD; Samantha Meltzer-Brody,

More information

1. Family aggregation and long-term outcome of psychopathology in children and adolescents in the Danish Three Generation Study (3GS)

1. Family aggregation and long-term outcome of psychopathology in children and adolescents in the Danish Three Generation Study (3GS) Aalborg CAP research programme 2016 1. Family aggregation and long-term outcome of psychopathology in children and adolescents in the Danish Three Generation Study (3GS) Objectives: Study of the aggregation

More information

THE SAFETY OF THE MEASLES,

THE SAFETY OF THE MEASLES, ORIGINAL CONTRIBUTION MMR Vaccination and Febrile Seizures Evaluation of Susceptible Subgroups and Long-term Prognosis Mogens Vestergaard, MD, PhD Anders Hviid, MSci Kreesten Meldgaard Madsen, MD, PhD

More information

Indicators of suicide among people with serious mental illness

Indicators of suicide among people with serious mental illness Indicators of suicide among people with serious mental illness OECD/Denmark Mette Jørgensen, Søren Paaske Johnsen, Poul Erik Hansen, Katrine Grau, Jette Bauer and Jan Mainz Friday 14th November 2014 Agenda

More information

Sex differences in mortality among patients admitted with affective disorders in North Norway -

Sex differences in mortality among patients admitted with affective disorders in North Norway - Sex differences in mortality among patients admitted with affective disorders in North Norway - a 33-year prospective register study Anne Høye a,b, Ragnar Nesvåg c,d, Ted Reichborn-Kjennerud c, Bjarne

More information

Are repeated assisted reproductive technology treatments and an unsuccessful outcome risk factors for unipolar depression in infertile women?

Are repeated assisted reproductive technology treatments and an unsuccessful outcome risk factors for unipolar depression in infertile women? A C TA Obstetricia et Gynecologica AOGS ORIGINAL RESEARCH ARTICLE Are repeated assisted reproductive technology treatments and an unsuccessful outcome risk factors for unipolar depression in infertile

More information

first three years of life

first three years of life Journal of Epidemiology and Community Health, 1981, 35, 18-184 Parental smoking and lower respiratory illness in the first three years of life D. M. FERGUSSON, L. J. HORWOOD, F. T. SHANNON, AND BRENT TAYLOR

More information

Objectives. Developing Communities. APNA 26th Annual Conference Session 2016: November 8, Guenzel 1

Objectives. Developing Communities. APNA 26th Annual Conference Session 2016: November 8, Guenzel 1 Nick Guenzel, APRN, PhD candidate University of Nebraska Medical Center College of Nursing The speaker has no conflicts of interest to disclose Supported in part by the Global Mental Health Partnership

More information

Inflammation in Adolescence and Schizophrenia Risk in Adulthood By Brian Miller, MD, PhD, MPH

Inflammation in Adolescence and Schizophrenia Risk in Adulthood By Brian Miller, MD, PhD, MPH Inflammation in Adolescence and Schizophrenia Risk in Adulthood By Brian Miller, MD, PhD, MPH 2016 Psychiatric Times RESEARCH UPDATE The investigation of immune system abnormalities in schizophrenia, though

More information

Birth Rate among Patients with Epilepsy: A Nationwide Population-based Cohort Study in Finland

Birth Rate among Patients with Epilepsy: A Nationwide Population-based Cohort Study in Finland American Journal of Epidemiology Copyright 2004 by the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health All rights reserved Vol. 159, No. 11 Printed in U.S.A. DOI: 10.1093/aje/kwh140 Birth Rate among Patients

More information

Exploring the Relationship Between Substance Abuse and Dependence Disorders and Discharge Status: Results and Implications

Exploring the Relationship Between Substance Abuse and Dependence Disorders and Discharge Status: Results and Implications MWSUG 2017 - Paper DG02 Exploring the Relationship Between Substance Abuse and Dependence Disorders and Discharge Status: Results and Implications ABSTRACT Deanna Naomi Schreiber-Gregory, Henry M Jackson

More information

ORIGINAL ARTICLE. may independently increase the risk of schizophrenia,

ORIGINAL ARTICLE. may independently increase the risk of schizophrenia, ORIGINAL ARTICLE Marital and Labor Market Status in the Long Run in Schizophrenia Esben Agerbo, MSc; Majella Byrne, MSc; William W. Eaton, PhD; Preben B. Mortensen, MD, DMSc Background: Singleness and

More information

Supplementary Online Content

Supplementary Online Content Supplementary Online Content Sandin S, Nygren K-G, Iliadou A, Hultman C, Reichenberg. Autism and Mental Retardation Among Offspring Born After In Vitro Fertilization. JAMA. doi:10.1001/jama.2013.7222.

More information

FERTILITY AND PSYCHOSIS Method Study Design This historical matched-cohort study of records from the General Practice Research Database (14) was carri

FERTILITY AND PSYCHOSIS Method Study Design This historical matched-cohort study of records from the General Practice Research Database (14) was carri Article The General Fertility Rate in Women With Psychotic Disorders Louise Michele Howard, M.Sc., M.R.C.Psych., M.R.C.P. Channi Kumar, Ph.D., F.R.C.Psych. Morven Leese, Ph.D. Graham Thornicroft, Ph.D.,

More information

Prenatal Care of Women Who Give Birth to Children with Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorder Are we missing an opportunity for prevention?

Prenatal Care of Women Who Give Birth to Children with Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorder Are we missing an opportunity for prevention? Prenatal Care of Women Who Give Birth to Children with Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorder Are we missing an opportunity for prevention? Deepa Singal, PhD Candidate 1 Manitoba Centre for Health Policy Manitoba

More information

Parental age and autism: Population data from NJ

Parental age and autism: Population data from NJ Parental age and autism: Population data from NJ Introduction While the cause of autism is not known, current research suggests that a combination of genetic and environmental factors may be involved.

More information

Scandinavian registries boost autism research

Scandinavian registries boost autism research NEWS Scandinavian registries boost autism research BY VIRGINIA HUGHES 9 FEBRUARY 2009 1 / 6 Every baby born in Denmark, within the first few days of life, receives a unique, 10-digit identification number.

More information

LO S I N G TO U C H W I T H R E A L I T Y SEARCHING FOR THE SEEDS OF PSYCHOSIS

LO S I N G TO U C H W I T H R E A L I T Y SEARCHING FOR THE SEEDS OF PSYCHOSIS LO S I N G TO U C H W I T H R E A L I T Y SEARCHING FOR THE SEEDS OF PSYCHOSIS Dolores Malaspina, MD, MS, MSPH Anita & Joseph Steckler Professor of Psychiatry & Child Psychiatry - NYU Langone Medical Center

More information

S P O U S A L R ES E M B L A N C E I N PSYCHOPATHOLOGY: A C O M PA R I SO N O F PA R E N T S O F C H I LD R E N W I T H A N D WITHOUT PSYCHOPATHOLOGY

S P O U S A L R ES E M B L A N C E I N PSYCHOPATHOLOGY: A C O M PA R I SO N O F PA R E N T S O F C H I LD R E N W I T H A N D WITHOUT PSYCHOPATHOLOGY Aggregation of psychopathology in a clinical sample of children and their parents S P O U S A L R ES E M B L A N C E I N PSYCHOPATHOLOGY: A C O M PA R I SO N O F PA R E N T S O F C H I LD R E N W I T H

More information

Schizophrenia and Bipolar Disorders II: Analytic Epidemiology and the Search for Etiologic Clues. William Eaton, PhD Johns Hopkins University

Schizophrenia and Bipolar Disorders II: Analytic Epidemiology and the Search for Etiologic Clues. William Eaton, PhD Johns Hopkins University This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike License. Your use of this material constitutes acceptance of that license and the conditions of use of materials on this

More information

Supplementary Online Content

Supplementary Online Content Supplementary Online Content Viktorin A, Uher R, Kolevzon A, Reichenberg A, Levine SZ, Sandin S. Association of antidepressant medication use during pregnancy with intellectual disability in offspring.

More information

P revious studies show that children born below 28

P revious studies show that children born below 28 655 ORIGINAL ARTICLE Gestational age, birth weight, and the risk of hyperkinetic disorder K M Linnet, K Wisborg, E Agerbo, N J Secher, P H Thomsen, T B Henriksen... See end of article for authors affiliations...

More information

SOME EPIDEMIOLOGICAL ASPECTS OF DOWN'S SYNDROME IN BRITISH COLUMBIA

SOME EPIDEMIOLOGICAL ASPECTS OF DOWN'S SYNDROME IN BRITISH COLUMBIA Brit. J. prev. soc. Med. (1968), 22, 81-85 SOME EPIDEMIOLOGICAL ASPECTS OF DOWN'S SYNDROME IN BRITISH COLUMBIA BY P. A. BAIRD, M.D., C.M. (MCGILL), RESEARCH FELLOW, AND J. R. MILLER, M.A. (TORONTO), PH.D.

More information

ARTICLE. Maternal and Paternal Age and Risk of Autism Spectrum Disorders

ARTICLE. Maternal and Paternal Age and Risk of Autism Spectrum Disorders ARTICLE Maternal and Paternal Age and Risk of Autism Spectrum Disorders Lisa A. Croen, PhD; Daniel V. Najjar, MS; Bruce Fireman, MA; Judith K. Grether, PhD Objective: To explore the association between

More information

Cohort Profile: The Metropolit 1953 Danish Male Birth Cohort

Cohort Profile: The Metropolit 1953 Danish Male Birth Cohort Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the International Epidemiological Association International Journal of Epidemiology 2006;35:541 545 Ó The Author 2005; all rights reserved. Advance Access

More information

Birth Weight and Childhood Cancer Deaths 1,2

Birth Weight and Childhood Cancer Deaths 1,2 Birth Weight and Childhood Cancer Deaths 1,2 Diane E. Eisenberg 3,4 and Tom Sorahan 5,6 ABSTRACT -For investigation of the hypothesis that elevated birth weight characterizes children dying from cancer,

More information

BMJ Open. Reproductive medicine. Secondary Subject Heading: Epidemiology, Obstetrics and gynaecology, Public health

BMJ Open. Reproductive medicine. Secondary Subject Heading: Epidemiology, Obstetrics and gynaecology, Public health Psychiatric disorders among women and men in assisted reproductive technology (ART) treatment. The Danish National ART-Couple (DANAC) cohort: protocol for a longitudinal, national register-based cohort

More information

Incidence and Risk of Alcohol Use Disorders by Age, Gender and Poverty Status: A Population-Based-10 Year Follow-Up Study

Incidence and Risk of Alcohol Use Disorders by Age, Gender and Poverty Status: A Population-Based-10 Year Follow-Up Study Incidence and Risk of Alcohol Use Disorders by Age, Gender and Poverty Status: A Population-Based-10 Year Chun-Te Lee 1,2, Chiu-Yueh Hsiao 3, Yi-Chyan Chen 4,5, Oswald Ndi Nfor 6, Jing-Yang Huang 6, Lee

More information

Statistical Reasoning in Public Health Biostatistics 612, 2009, HW#3

Statistical Reasoning in Public Health Biostatistics 612, 2009, HW#3 Statistical Reasoning in Public Health Biostatistics 612, 2009, HW#3 1. A random sample of 200 patients admitted to an adult intensive care unit (ICU) was collected to examine factors associated with death

More information

Institute for Advanced Development Studies. Development Research Working Paper Series. No. 05/2008

Institute for Advanced Development Studies. Development Research Working Paper Series. No. 05/2008 Institute for Advanced Development Studies Development Research Working Paper Series No. 05/2008 Socio-economic differences in suicide risk vary by sex : A population-based case-control study of 18-65

More information

Vitamin D and mental health: reflection on U-shaped relationships

Vitamin D and mental health: reflection on U-shaped relationships ILSI SEA Region Vit D Conference, Australia, June 2012 (www.ilsi.org/sea Region) Vitamin D and mental health: reflection on U-shaped relationships John McGrath Schizophrenia a neurodevelopmental disorder

More information

Diabetologia 9 Springer-Verlag 1983

Diabetologia 9 Springer-Verlag 1983 Diabetologia (1983) 25:226-230 Diabetologia 9 Springer-Verlag 1983 Epidemiological Studies of Diabetes Mellitus in Denmark: 3. Clinical Characteristics and Incidence of Diabetes Among Males Aged 0 to 19

More information

AN INTRODUCTION TO EPIGENETICS DR CHLOE WONG

AN INTRODUCTION TO EPIGENETICS DR CHLOE WONG AN INTRODUCTION TO EPIGENETICS DR CHLOE WONG MRC SGDP CENTRE, INSTITUTE OF PSYCHIATRY KING S COLLEGE LONDON Oct 2015 Lecture Overview WHY WHAT EPIGENETICS IN PSYCHIARTY Technology-driven genomics research

More information

Challenges in design and analysis of large register-based epidemiological studies

Challenges in design and analysis of large register-based epidemiological studies FMS/DSBS autumn meeting 2014 Challenges in design and analysis of large register-based epidemiological studies Caroline Weibull & Anna Johansson Department of Medical Epidemiology and Biostatistics (MEB)

More information

Association between Global Assessment of Functioning scores and indicators of functioning, severity, and prognosis in first-time schizophrenia

Association between Global Assessment of Functioning scores and indicators of functioning, severity, and prognosis in first-time schizophrenia Clinical Epidemiology open access to scientific and medical research Open Access Full Text Article ORIGINAL RESEARCH Association between Global Assessment of Functioning scores and indicators of functioning,

More information

Key research: Gottesman et al. (2010) Severe mental disorders in offspring with two psychiatrically ill parents

Key research: Gottesman et al. (2010) Severe mental disorders in offspring with two psychiatrically ill parents Key research: Gottesman et al. (2010) Severe mental disorders in offspring with two psychiatrically ill parents Background Previous research has found that if one parent has a mental disorder there is

More information

DNBC Application Form

DNBC Application Form 1 Application form for access to data and biological samples Ref. 2016-20 Project title: Applicant: Other partners taking part in the project Names and work addresses: Developmental trajectories of child

More information

Use of Selective Serotonin Reuptake Inhibitors during Pregnancy and Risk of Autism

Use of Selective Serotonin Reuptake Inhibitors during Pregnancy and Risk of Autism The new england journal of medicine original article Use of Selective Serotonin Reuptake Inhibitors during Pregnancy and Risk of Autism Anders Hviid, Dr.Med.Sci., Mads Melbye, M.D., Dr.Med.Sci., and Björn

More information

Aggregation of psychopathology in a clinical sample of children and their parents

Aggregation of psychopathology in a clinical sample of children and their parents Aggregation of psychopathology in a clinical sample of children and their parents PA R E N T S O F C H I LD R E N W I T H PSYC H O PAT H O LO G Y : PSYC H I AT R I C P R O B LEMS A N D T H E A S SO C I

More information

Lecture 17: Human Genetics. I. Types of Genetic Disorders. A. Single gene disorders

Lecture 17: Human Genetics. I. Types of Genetic Disorders. A. Single gene disorders Lecture 17: Human Genetics I. Types of Genetic Disorders A. Single gene disorders B. Multifactorial traits 1. Mutant alleles at several loci acting in concert C. Chromosomal abnormalities 1. Physical changes

More information

Anxiety disorders in mothers and their children: prospective longitudinal community study

Anxiety disorders in mothers and their children: prospective longitudinal community study Anxiety disorders in mothers and their children: prospective longitudinal community study Andrea Schreier, Hans-Ulrich Wittchen, Michael Höfler and Roselind Lieb Summary The relationship between DSM IV

More information

Paternal age related schizophrenia (PARS): latent subgroups detected by k-means clustering analysis

Paternal age related schizophrenia (PARS): latent subgroups detected by k-means clustering analysis Paternal age related schizophrenia (PARS): latent subgroups detected by k-means clustering analysis Hyejoo Lee a, Dolores Malaspina b, Hongshik Ahn a, Mary Perrin b, Mark G. Opler b, Karine Kleinhaus b,

More information

Professional Post Baccalaureate and Post Master s Social Work Experience

Professional Post Baccalaureate and Post Master s Social Work Experience Dana M. Alonzo, PhD, MSW Degree Information PhD Fordham University School of Social Service Social Work 2000 2004 MSW New York University of Social Work Social Work 1995 1997 BA New York University 1900

More information

Nature Genetics: doi: /ng Supplementary Figure 1

Nature Genetics: doi: /ng Supplementary Figure 1 Supplementary Figure 1 Illustrative example of ptdt using height The expected value of a child s polygenic risk score (PRS) for a trait is the average of maternal and paternal PRS values. For example,

More information

SCIENCE SPM MODULE 2

SCIENCE SPM MODULE 2 SCIENCE SPM MODULE 2 PAPER 1 1. What is the name of the fine thread-like structure found in the nucleus of the cell? A Gene B Chromosome C Cell membrane D Nuclear membrane 2. The chromosomes present in

More information

Chapter V Depression and Women with Spinal Cord Injury

Chapter V Depression and Women with Spinal Cord Injury 1 Chapter V Depression and Women with Spinal Cord Injury L ike all women with disabilities, women with spinal cord injury (SCI) may be at an elevated risk for depression due to the double jeopardy of being

More information

Parental antibiotics and childhood asthma : a population-based study. Örtqvist, A.K.; Lundholma, C.; Fang, F.; Fall, T.; Almqvist, C.

Parental antibiotics and childhood asthma : a population-based study. Örtqvist, A.K.; Lundholma, C.; Fang, F.; Fall, T.; Almqvist, C. This is an author produced version of a paper accepted by Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology. This paper has been peer-reviewed but does not include the final publisher proof-corrections or journal

More information

Supplementary Online Content

Supplementary Online Content Supplementary Online Content Mølgaard-Nielsen D, Hviid A. Newer-generation antiepileptic drugs and the risk of major birth defects. JAMA. 2011;305(19):1996-2002. emethods. Birth defects and potential confounders

More information

Benign Breast Disease among First-Degree Relatives of Young Breast Cancer Patients

Benign Breast Disease among First-Degree Relatives of Young Breast Cancer Patients American Journal of Epidemiology ª The Author 2008. Published by the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health. All rights reserved. For permissions, please e-mail: journals.permissions@oxfordjournals.org.

More information

Articles. Funding European Research Council.

Articles. Funding European Research Council. and violent criminality among young people who experienced trauma-related hospital during childhood: a Danish national cohort study Roger T Webb, Sussie Antonsen, Matthew J Carr, Louis Appleby, Carsten

More information

Association between Central Nervous System Infections during Childhood and Adult Onset Schizophrenia and Other Psychoses: A 28-Year Follow-Up

Association between Central Nervous System Infections during Childhood and Adult Onset Schizophrenia and Other Psychoses: A 28-Year Follow-Up International Journal of Epidemiology International Epidemiological Association 1997 Vol. 26, No. 4 Printed in Great Britain Association between Central Nervous System Infections during Childhood and Adult

More information

Childhood Social Environment and Risk of Drug and Alcohol Abuse in a Cohort of Danish Men Born in 1953

Childhood Social Environment and Risk of Drug and Alcohol Abuse in a Cohort of Danish Men Born in 1953 American Journal of Epidemiology Copyright ª 2006 by the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health All rights reserved; printed in U.S.A. Vol. 163, No. 7 DOI: 10.1093/aje/kwj084 Advance Access publication

More information

Supplementary Appendix

Supplementary Appendix Supplementary Appendix This appendix has been provided by the authors to give readers additional information about their work. Supplement to: Svanström H, Pasternak B, Hviid A. Use of azithromycin and

More information

S ocial status and health are strongly related and smoking

S ocial status and health are strongly related and smoking 604 RESEARCH REPORT Impact of smoking on the social gradient in health expectancy in Denmark Henrik Brønnum-Hansen, Knud Juel... See end of article for authors affiliations... Correspondence to: Mr H Brønnum-Hansen,

More information

Supplementary appendix: Oral polio vaccination and hospital admissions with non-polio infections in Denmark: Nationwide retrospective cohort study

Supplementary appendix: Oral polio vaccination and hospital admissions with non-polio infections in Denmark: Nationwide retrospective cohort study Supplementary appendix: Oral polio vaccination and hospital admissions with non-polio infections in Denmark: Nationwide retrospective cohort study Signe Sørup, Lone G. Stensballe, Tyra G. Krause, Peter

More information

ORIGINAL ARTICLE. Severe Mental Disorders in Offspring With 2 Psychiatrically Ill Parents. studies of offspring of 2 psychiatric patients followed

ORIGINAL ARTICLE. Severe Mental Disorders in Offspring With 2 Psychiatrically Ill Parents. studies of offspring of 2 psychiatric patients followed ORIGINAL ARTICLE Severe Mental Disorders in Offspring With 2 Psychiatrically Ill Parents Irving I. Gottesman, PhD, HonFRCPsych; Thomas Munk Laursen, PhD; Aksel Bertelsen, MD; Preben Bo Mortensen, DrMedSc

More information

Trauma, Comorbidity, and Mortality Following Diagnoses of Severe Stress and Adjustment Disorders: A Nationwide Cohort Study

Trauma, Comorbidity, and Mortality Following Diagnoses of Severe Stress and Adjustment Disorders: A Nationwide Cohort Study American Journal of Epidemiology Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health 2. This work is written by (a) US Government employee(s) and is in

More information

Agoraphobia Prepared by Stephanie Gilbert Summary

Agoraphobia Prepared by Stephanie Gilbert Summary Agoraphobia Prepared by Stephanie Gilbert Summary The Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, IV, cites the criteria for Agoraphobia as with, or without, the occurrence of Panic Disorder.

More information

Psychiatric Hospitalizations among Survivors of Cancer in Childhood or Adolescence

Psychiatric Hospitalizations among Survivors of Cancer in Childhood or Adolescence The new england journal of medicine original article Psychiatric Hospitalizations among Survivors of Cancer in Childhood or Adolescence Lone Ross, M.D., Ph.D., Christoffer Johansen, M.D., Ph.D., Susanne

More information

MENTAL HEALTH INDICATORS: WITHIN 30-DAY HOSPITAL RE-ADMISSION

MENTAL HEALTH INDICATORS: WITHIN 30-DAY HOSPITAL RE-ADMISSION MENTAL HEALTH INDICATORS: WITHIN 30-DAY HOSPITAL RE-ADMISSION OECD HCQI Expert Meeting Rie Fujisawa November 16 th 2012 Within 30-day hospital re-admission Data are collected in two different ways: The

More information

Does prenatal alcohol exposure affect neurodevelopment? Attempts to give causal answers

Does prenatal alcohol exposure affect neurodevelopment? Attempts to give causal answers Does prenatal alcohol exposure affect neurodevelopment? Attempts to give causal answers Luisa Zuccolo l.zuccolo@bristol.ac.uk MRC IEU, School of Social and Community Medicine Background Prenatal alcohol

More information

Urbanisation as a risk indicator for psychiatric admission

Urbanisation as a risk indicator for psychiatric admission 7Chapter 7 Urbanisation as a risk indicator for psychiatric admission Jaap Peen, Jack Dekker Social Psychiatry and Psychiatric Epidemiology (2003) 38: 535-538 Abstract Objective: This study examines the

More information

Genetics Review. Alleles. The Punnett Square. Genotype and Phenotype. Codominance. Incomplete Dominance

Genetics Review. Alleles. The Punnett Square. Genotype and Phenotype. Codominance. Incomplete Dominance Genetics Review Alleles These two different versions of gene A create a condition known as heterozygous. Only the dominant allele (A) will be expressed. When both chromosomes have identical copies of the

More information

Breast cancer risk among women with psychiatric admission with affective or neurotic disorders: a nationwide cohort study in Denmark

Breast cancer risk among women with psychiatric admission with affective or neurotic disorders: a nationwide cohort study in Denmark Article no. bjoc.1999.0785 Breast cancer risk among women with psychiatric admission with affective or neurotic disorders: a nationwide cohort study in Denmark K Hjerl 1, EW Andersen 2, N Keiding 2, A

More information

Article. Head Injury as Risk Factor for Psychiatric Disorders: A Nationwide Register-Based Follow-Up Study of 113,906 Persons With Head Injury

Article. Head Injury as Risk Factor for Psychiatric Disorders: A Nationwide Register-Based Follow-Up Study of 113,906 Persons With Head Injury Article Head Injury as Risk Factor for Psychiatric : A Nationwide Register-Based Follow-Up Study of 113,906 Persons With Head Injury Sonja Orlovska, M.D. Michael Skaarup Pedersen, M.Sc. Michael Eriksen

More information

SOCIAL MOBILITY IN RELATION TO CARDIOVASCULAR AND PSYCHIATRIC HEALTH

SOCIAL MOBILITY IN RELATION TO CARDIOVASCULAR AND PSYCHIATRIC HEALTH From Department of Medical Epidemiology and Biostatistics, Karolinska Institutet, Stockholm, Sweden SOCIAL MOBILITY IN RELATION TO CARDIOVASCULAR AND PSYCHIATRIC HEALTH Sanna Tiikkaja Stockholm 2013 All

More information

The impact of economic crisis on suicide in Asia and other regions.

The impact of economic crisis on suicide in Asia and other regions. The impact of economic crisis on suicide in Asia and other regions. David Gunnell Bristol Acknowledgements Shu-Sen Chang Nicos Middleton Jonathan Sterne Esben Agerbo Camilla Haw Andrew Cheng Robert Lu

More information

Data Sources & Issues for Health Inequalities Research. J. Dunn

Data Sources & Issues for Health Inequalities Research. J. Dunn Data Sources & Issues for Health Inequalities Research J. Dunn Background & Introduction major challenge to find secondary data sources that are compatible with research questions in many instances, data

More information

The data were analysed using Fisher s exact test and the chi-squared test.

The data were analysed using Fisher s exact test and the chi-squared test. Congenital malformations are a major cause of perinatal and neonatal death [1], both in developed and developing countries [2]. These malformations have multifactorial etiologies and 40% of cases are idiopathic

More information

SSN SBPM Workshop Exam One. Short Answer Questions & Answers

SSN SBPM Workshop Exam One. Short Answer Questions & Answers SSN SBPM Workshop Exam One Short Answer Questions & Answers 1. Describe the effects of DNA damage on the cell cycle. ANS : DNA damage causes cell cycle arrest at a G2 checkpoint. This arrest allows time

More information

A descriptive analysis of admissions to Amanuel Psychiatric Hospital in Ethiopia

A descriptive analysis of admissions to Amanuel Psychiatric Hospital in Ethiopia Original article A descriptive analysis of admissions to Amanuel Psychiatric Hospital in Ethiopia Abebaw Fekadu 1, Menelik Desta 2, Atalay Alem 3, Martin Prince 1 Abstract Background: The care of patients

More information

Low birthweight and respiratory disease in adulthood: A population-based casecontrol

Low birthweight and respiratory disease in adulthood: A population-based casecontrol Page 26 of 36 Online Data Supplement Low birthweight and respiratory disease in adulthood: A population-based casecontrol study Eric C. Walter, MD; William J. Ehlenbach, MD; David L. Hotchkin, MD, Jason

More information

Risk for attempted suicide in children and youths after contact with somatic hospitals: a Danish register based nested caseecontrol study

Risk for attempted suicide in children and youths after contact with somatic hospitals: a Danish register based nested caseecontrol study JECH Online First, published on October 14, 2010 as 10.1136/jech.2009.103887 Research report Risk for attempted suicide in children and youths after contact with somatic hospitals: a Danish register based

More information

Prevalence of Hypospadias in Danish Boys: A Longitudinal Study,

Prevalence of Hypospadias in Danish Boys: A Longitudinal Study, european urology 55 (2009) 1022 1026 available at www.sciencedirect.com journal homepage: www.europeanurology.com Platinum Priority Pediatric Urology Editorial by Paolo Caione on pp. 1027 1029 of this

More information