
Alcohol dependence (AD) is clinically and etiologically heterogeneous. The goal of this study was to explore AD subtypes among a sample of 1221 participants in the Irish Affected Sib Pair Study of Alcohol Dependence, all of whom met DSM-IV criteria for AD.
 Variables used to identify the subtypes  included major depressive disorder, antisocial personality disorder, illicit  drug dependence (cannabis, sedatives, stimulants, cocaine, opioids, and  hallucinogens), nicotine dependence, the personality traits of neuroticism and  novelty seeking, and early alcohol use.
Using latent class analysis, a 3-class  solution was identified as the most parsimonious description of the data.  Individuals in a Mild class were least likely to have comorbid psychopathology,  whereas a severe class had highest probabilities of all comorbid  psychopathology. The third class was characterized by high probabilities of  major depression and higher neuroticism scores, but lower likelihood of other  comorbid disorders than seen in the severe class.
Overall, sibling pair  resemblance for class was stronger within than between classes, and was greatest  for siblings within the severe class, suggesting a stronger familial etiology  for this class.
These findings are consistent with the affective regulation and behavioral disinhibition subtypes of alcoholism, and are in line with prior work suggesting familial influences on subtype etiology.
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