AbstractBackgroundCannabis use and childhood maltreatment are independent risk factors for the development of psychotic symptoms. These factors have been found to interact in some but not all studies. One of the reasons may be that childhood maltreatment and cannabis primarily induce psychotic symptoms in genetically susceptible individuals. In this context, an extensively studied psychosis vulnerability gene is catechol-methyl-transferase (COMT). Therefore, we aimed to examine whether the COMT Val158Met polymorphism (rs4680) moderates the interaction between childhood maltreatment and cannabis use on psychotic symptoms in the general population.MethodThe discovery sample consisted of 918 individuals from a cross-sectional study. For replic...
Background: Epidemiological and retrospective studies suggest a cannabis x catechol-O-methyltransfer...
Childhood maltreatment (CM) and genetic vulnerability are both risk factors for psychosis, but the r...
Observational studies have suggested that psychometric psychosis liability and a functional polymorp...
AbstractBackgroundCannabis use and childhood maltreatment are independent risk factors for the devel...
Background: Cannabis use and childhood maltreatment are independent risk factors for the development...
Cannabis use and childhood maltreatment are independent risk factors for the development of psychoti...
OBJECTIVE: To test whether the association between childhood abuse, cannabis use and psychotic ex...
Evidence suggests that childhood trauma and cannabis use sinergistically impact on psychosis risk, a...
Background A putative interaction between cannabis and variation at rs4680 within the catechol-meth...
BACKGROUND: Recent evidence documents that cannabis use by young people is a modest statistical risk...
Background Neither environmental nor genetic factors are sufficient to predict the transdiagnostic e...
Background Neither environmental nor genetic factors are sufficient to predict the transdiagnostic e...
Neither environmental nor genetic factors are sufficient to predict the transdiagnostic expression o...
Background: Epidemiological and retrospective studies suggest a cannabis x catechol-O-methyltransfer...
Childhood maltreatment (CM) and genetic vulnerability are both risk factors for psychosis, but the r...
Observational studies have suggested that psychometric psychosis liability and a functional polymorp...
AbstractBackgroundCannabis use and childhood maltreatment are independent risk factors for the devel...
Background: Cannabis use and childhood maltreatment are independent risk factors for the development...
Cannabis use and childhood maltreatment are independent risk factors for the development of psychoti...
OBJECTIVE: To test whether the association between childhood abuse, cannabis use and psychotic ex...
Evidence suggests that childhood trauma and cannabis use sinergistically impact on psychosis risk, a...
Background A putative interaction between cannabis and variation at rs4680 within the catechol-meth...
BACKGROUND: Recent evidence documents that cannabis use by young people is a modest statistical risk...
Background Neither environmental nor genetic factors are sufficient to predict the transdiagnostic e...
Background Neither environmental nor genetic factors are sufficient to predict the transdiagnostic e...
Neither environmental nor genetic factors are sufficient to predict the transdiagnostic expression o...
Background: Epidemiological and retrospective studies suggest a cannabis x catechol-O-methyltransfer...
Childhood maltreatment (CM) and genetic vulnerability are both risk factors for psychosis, but the r...
Observational studies have suggested that psychometric psychosis liability and a functional polymorp...