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Association of DRD4 in children with ADHD and comorbid conduct problems

✍ Scribed by Holmes, Jane ;Payton, Antony ;Barrett, Jennifer ;Harrington, Richard ;McGuffin, Peter ;Owen, Michael ;Ollier, William ;Worthington, Jane ;Gill, Michael ;Kirley, Aiveen ;Hawi, Ziarih ;Fitzgerald, Michael ;Asherson, Philip ;Curran, Sarah ;Mill, John ;Gould, Alison ;Taylor, Eric ;Kent, Lyndsey ;Craddock, Nick ;Thapar, Anita


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
2002
Tongue
English
Weight
76 KB
Volume
114
Category
Article
ISSN
0148-7299

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✦ Synopsis


Abstract

Recent family and twin study findings suggest that ADHD when comorbid with conduct problems may represent a particularly familial and heritable form of ADHD. Although several independent groups have shown association between the DRD4 7 repeat allele and ADHD, others have failed to replicate this finding. Previous TDT analyses of UK and Eire samples had also been negative. We set out to further examine the role of DRD4 but selecting a subgroup of children with ADHD and comorbid conduct problems. Families were recruited from Manchester, Ireland, Birmingham and London clinics. From these, 67 children who fulfilled diagnostic criteria for ADHD and who displayed conduct disorder symptoms were selected. TDT analysis, which had previously yielded negative results for the total sample, showed evidence of association between DRD4 and “ADHD with conduct problems” (7 repeat allele‐24 transmissions, 13 non‐transmissions; one‐tailed P = 0.05). These results provide further support for the role of DRD4 in ADHD. Furthermore, these results when considered together with family and twin study findings, suggest that those children with ADHD and comorbid conduct problems may be particularly informative for molecular genetic studies of ADHD. Further work is needed to examine these phenotype issues. © 2002 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.


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