We performed segregation analysis on 495 nuclear families, ascertained for
the father's substance abuse diagnosis, in an attempt to determine the role
of genetic and other influences in determining the variability of DSM-III-
R-defined attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), For our analyses
, ADHD was treated as a quantitative variable, utilizing the semicontinuous
scale provided by the 15-item symptom count within DSM-III-R. Analyses con
sisted of both class A and class D regressive models for which covariate ef
fects (socioeconomic status) and sex dependence were estimated, Segregation
analysis of the quantitative trait (ADHD symptom count) in the entire data
set supported a transmissible non-Mendelian major effect. Models which wer
e sex-dependent and included covariate effects provided the best fit to the
data. In addition, similar analyses were performed on a 130-nuclear family
subgroup of the data set in which at least one of the members of the nucle
ar family met DSM-III-R diagnostic criteria for ADHD. The sex-dependent Men
delian codominant model was best supported by the data, while other models
could be rejected. Incorporating covariate effects did not provide a better
fit for the data. Thus, this study is consistent with Mendelian transmissi
on of ADHD symptom count in a clinically relevant population. Overall, our
results support the presence of a heritable continuous trait of which ADHD
represents an extreme. Am. J. Med. Genet. (Neuropsychiatr. Genet.) 88:71-78
, 1999. (C) 1999 Wiley-Liss, Inc.