Source
Pediatric Psychopharmacology Program, Department of Psychiatry, Psychiatric and Neurodevelopmental Genetics Unit, Center for Human Genetics, Massachusetts General Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts 02114, USA. dageller@partners.org
Abstract
BACKGROUND:
To examine the relationship between obsessive compulsive disorder (OCD) and attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) in children and adolescents using familial risk analysis.
METHODS:
We assessed for ADHD and OCD in the 1057 first-degree relatives of three groups of index children: those with OCD and ADHD, those with OCD but no ADHD and matched controls with neither disorder.
RESULTS:
The age-corrected risk for OCD was similarly elevated in families of OCD youth with (14.8%) and without ADHD (17.5%) (p=.78), and both groups had significantly higher rates of OCD compared with controls (.5%) (p<.001). In contrast, the risk for ADHD was significantly elevated only among relatives of youth who had ADHD (15.3%) compared with controls (4.6%) (p<.001). Relatives affected with ADHD also had a significantly elevated risk for OCD compared to relatives unaffected by ADHD (20% vs. 4.9%, hazard ratio 4.8) (p<.001) and the two disorders occurred together with higher than expected frequency in affected relatives of OCD+ADHD probands (p<. 001) suggesting co-segregation between these two disorders. There was no evidence of nonrandom mating between OCD- and ADHD-affected spouses.
CONCLUSIONS:
These results extend previous findings regarding the familiality of both OCD and ADHD and provide further evidence of a familial relationship between ADHD and pediatric OCD which best fit the hypothesis of a unique familial subtype.