Neighborhood alcohol outlet density and genetic influences on alcohol use: Evidence for gene–environment interaction

Citation

Slutske, Wendy S.; Deutsch, Arielle R.; & Piasecki, Thomas M. (2019). Neighborhood alcohol outlet density and genetic influences on alcohol use: Evidence for gene–environment interaction. Psychological Medicine. vol. 49 (3) pp. 474-482

Abstract

Background Genetic influences on alcohol involvement are likely to vary as a function of the ‘alcohol environment,’ given that exposure to alcohol is a necessary precondition for genetic risk to be expressed. However, few gene–environment interaction studies of alcohol involvement have focused on characteristics of the community-level alcohol environment. The goal of this study was to examine whether living in a community with more alcohol outlets would facilitate the expression of the genetic propensity to drink in a genetically-informed national survey of United States young adults. Methods The participants were 2434 18–26-year-old twin, full-, and half-sibling pairs from Wave III of the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent to Adult Health. Participants completed in-home interviews in which alcohol use was assessed. Alcohol outlet densities were extracted from state-level liquor license databases aggregated at the census tract level to derive the density of outlets. Results There was evidence that the estimates of genetic and environmental influences on alcohol use varied as a function of the density of alcohol outlets in the community. For example, the heritability of the frequency of alcohol use for those residing in a neighborhood with ten or more outlets was 74% (95% confidence limits = 55–94%), compared with 16% (95% confidence limits = 0–34%) for those in a neighborhood with zero outlets. This moderating effect of alcohol outlet density was not explained by the state of residence, population density, or neighborhood sociodemographic characteristics. Conclusions The results suggest that living in a neighborhood with many alcohol outlets may be especially high-risk for those individuals who are genetically predisposed to frequently drink.

URL

http://doi.org/10.1017/S0033291718001095

Keyword(s)

Alcohol outlet density

Reference Type

Journal Article

Journal Title

Psychological Medicine

Author(s)

Slutske, Wendy S.
Deutsch, Arielle R.
Piasecki, Thomas M.

Year Published

2019

Volume Number

49

Issue Number

3

Pages

474-482

Edition

May 7, 2018

DOI

10.1017/S0033291718001095

Reference ID

6518