Abstract

Recent studies have observed anticipation (earlier age at onset (AAO) or increased disease severity in successive generations) in familial schizophrenia. In other disorders, where the molecular mechanism (repeat expansion) is known, anticipation varies in degree depending on the sex of the transmitting parent. We investigated parental sex effects on anticipation in schizophrenia, using a familial sample of affected two-generation pairs in which anticipation had previously been demonstrated using the median intergenerational difference (MID) in AAO. A Wilcoxon rank sum test for independent samples was used to determine whether MID in AAO was significantly different for paternal and maternal transmission. Results suggested that in a sample of 127 parent-offspring pairs, anticipation was greater with paternal than with maternal transmission (MID = 18 and 14 years, respectively, P = 0.05). Paternal effects were strongest in 39 parent-offspring pairs with early-onset offspring (< or = 21 years) (MID = 22 and 17 years, respectively, for paternal and maternal transmission, P = 0.01). However, assessment of the effect of possible selection biases suggests that preferential ascertainment of late-onset fathers may have exerted important effects. While the results support possible paternal effects, further studies are needed to draw firm conclusions about true parent-of-origin effects on anticipation in familial schizophrenia.

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