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Springer Nature [academic journals on nature.com], Translational Psychiatry, 1(8), 2018

DOI: 10.1038/s41398-018-0249-9

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Heritability of obsessive–compulsive trait dimensions in youth from the general population

This paper is made freely available by the publisher.
This paper is made freely available by the publisher.

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Abstract

AbstractObsessive–compulsive disorder (OCD) is a heritable childhood-onset psychiatric disorder that may represent the extreme of obsessive–compulsive (OC) traits that are widespread in the general population. We report the heritability of the Toronto Obsessive–Compulsive Scale (TOCS), a new measure designed to assess the complete range of OC traits in youth. We also examined the dimensional nature of the TOCS and the degree to which genetic effects are unique or shared between dimensions. OC traits were measured using the TOCS in 16,718 youth (6–18 years) at a science museum. We conducted a factor analysis to identify OC trait dimensions. We used univariate and multivariate twin models to estimate the heritability of OC trait dimensions in a subset of twins (220 pairs). Six OC dimensions were identified: Cleaning/Contamination, Symmetry/Ordering, Rumination, Superstition, Counting/Checking, and Hoarding. The TOCS total score (74%) and each OC dimension was heritable (30–77%). Hoarding was not highly correlated with other OC dimensions, but did share genetic effects. Shared genetics accounted for most of the shared variance among dimensions, whereas unique environment accounted for the majority of dimension-specific variance. One exception was Hoarding, which had considerable unique genetic factors. A latent trait did not account for the shared variance between dimensions. In conclusion, OC traits and individual OC dimensions were heritable, although the degree of shared and dimension-specific etiological factors varied by dimension. The TOCS may be informative for genetic research of OC traits in youth. Genetic research of OC traits should consider both OC dimension and total trait scores.