Journal
PSYCHOLOGICAL MEDICINE
Volume 44, Issue 13, Pages 2867-2876Publisher
CAMBRIDGE UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1017/S0033291714000269
Keywords
Genetics; heritability; hoarding; obsessive-compulsive; twins
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Funding
- Addiction program of ZonMW [31160008]
- Tourette Syndrome Association (TSA) in the United States
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Background. Until recently, hoarding was considered an obsessive-compulsive symptom (OCS). However, current evidence suggests that these two phenotypes may be clinically, and perhaps etiologically, distinct. Both hoarding and OCS have a genetic etiology, but the degree of unique and shared genetic contributions to these phenotypes has not been well studied. Method. Prevalence rates were assessed for hoarding and OCS in a sample of adult twin pairs (n=7906 twins) and their family members from the Netherlands Twin Register (total sample=15914). Using Mplus, genetic analyses using liability threshold models were conducted for both phenotypes, for their co-morbidity, and for specific hoarding symptoms (cluttering, discarding and acquiring). Results. Of the total sample, 6.7% met criteria for clinically significant hoarding; endorsement of all three hoarding symptoms was 579%. Men had slightly higher rates than women. Also, 5.7% met criteria for clinically significant OCS; rates were similar in males and females. Genetic factors accounted for 36% of the variance for hoarding and 40% of the variance for OCS. The genetic correlation between hoarding and OCS was 0.10. There was no evidence of sex-specific genetic contributions for hoarding or OCS. There was evidence for a genetic contribution to all hoarding symptom subtypes. Only cluttering showed evidence of a contribution from the shared environment. Conclusions. OCS and hoarding are common in this population-based sample, have prevalence rates similar to those previously reported, and show significant heritability. Genetic factors contributed to the co-morbidity of both traits, although the genetic correlation between them was low.
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