Psychological Medicine, volume 55, publication number e51

Impulsivity facets and substance use involvement: insights from genomic structural equation modeling

Laura Vilar Ribó 1
Alexander S Hatoum 2
Andrew D. Grotzinger 3, 4
Travis T. Mallard 5
Sarah L. Elson 6
Pierre Fontanillas 1, 7
Abraham A. Palmer 3, 4
Daniel E. Gustavson 1, 7, 8
Sandra Sanchez-Roige 6
Show full list: 9 authors
Publication typeJournal Article
Publication date2025-02-17
scimago Q1
SJR2.768
CiteScore11.3
Impact factor5.9
ISSN00332917, 14698978
Abstract
Background

Impulsivity is a multidimensional trait associated with substance use disorders (SUDs), but the relationship between distinct impulsivity facets and stages of substance use involvement remains unclear.

Methods

We used genomic structural equation modeling and genome-wide association studies (N = 79,729–903,147) to examine the latent genetic architecture of nine impulsivity traits and seven substance use (SU) and SUD traits.

Results

We found that the SU and SUD factors were strongly genetically inter-correlated (rG=0.77) but their associations with impulsivity facets differed. Lack of premeditation, negative and positive urgency were equally positively genetically correlated with both the SU (rG=.0.30–0.50) and SUD (rG=0.38–0.46) factors; sensation seeking was more strongly genetically correlated with the SU factor (rG=0.27 versus rG=0.10); delay discounting was more strongly genetically correlated with the SUD factor (rG=0.31 versus rG=0.21); and lack of perseverance was only weakly genetically correlated with the SU factor (rG=0.10). After controlling for the genetic correlation between SU/SUD, we found that lack of premeditation was independently genetically associated with both the SU (β=0.42) and SUD factors (β=0.21); sensation seeking and positive urgency were independently genetically associated with the SU factor (β=0.48, β=0.33, respectively); and negative urgency and delay discounting were independently genetically associated with the SUD factor (β=0.33, β=0.36, respectively).

Conclusions

Our findings show that specific impulsivity facets confer risk for distinct stages of substance use involvement, with potential implications for SUDs prevention and treatment.

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