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18 - Genetic variation and drug dependence risk factors

from Part V - Specific psychotropic drugs and disorders

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  20 August 2009

Joel Gelernter
Affiliation:
Yale University School of Medicine and VA CT Healthcare Center, West Haven, USA
Henry Kranzler
Affiliation:
University of Connecticut School of Medicine, Farmington, USA
Bernard Lerer
Affiliation:
Hadassah-Hebrew Medical Center, Jerusalem
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Summary

OVERVIEW

This chapter discusses pharmacogenetics in the context of substance abuse and dependence. Owing to the nature of substance-dependence disorders – an exogenous substance is ingested – there is virtually always potential for direct interaction with pharmacogenetic factors, many of which would be expected to be specific to the substance of abuse. Several well-understood examples of such factors are discussed. These issues are placed in the context of identifying and understanding broader genetic risk factors for substance dependence, and of guiding development of pharmacological treatments, both for all patients abusing a given class of substance, and for individual patients based on their specific biochemical make-up as predicted by genetic polymorphism.

Introduction

Genetic factors are important contributors to risk for substance dependence. Some are specific to the substance (e.g., resulting in different euphoric effects by individual), and some are more general (e.g., personality features – novelty seeking, anti-social personality, and so on – which may influence exposure to substances or the transition from substance use to dependence). While the factors that might be mediated by personality and behavior can be conceptualized as analogous to genetic risk factors for other classes of psychiatric disorder, those that are specific to the abused substance could reflect a different set of mechanisms involving genetic variability in receptor–ligand interaction or metabolism of the substance. This can be illustrated by considering two hypothetical limiting cases.

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2002

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