The assessment of a Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders  Fourth Edition (DSM-IV) life-time history of alcohol dependence (LTH-AD) has  been found to be moderately reliable and substantially heritable. However, in  studies of the heritability of LTH-AD, measurement error could not be  discriminated from the true unique environmental effects. 
The aims of this study were to: (i) estimate the reliability of LTH-AD in a population based sample, (ii) identify characteristics of LTH-AD predicting a reliable diagnosis, (iii) investigate the heritability of LTH-AD as a function of diagnostic confidence, and (iv) to estimate the genetic and environmental influences on LTH-AD correcting for measurement error.
The aims of this study were to: (i) estimate the reliability of LTH-AD in a population based sample, (ii) identify characteristics of LTH-AD predicting a reliable diagnosis, (iii) investigate the heritability of LTH-AD as a function of diagnostic confidence, and (iv) to estimate the genetic and environmental influences on LTH-AD correcting for measurement error.
 An unselected sample of 4,203 male twins was interviewed  twice approximately 1-year apart assessing DSM-IV LTH-AD over the same period of  life. Logistic regression was used to identify clinical features that predict a  reliable diagnosis LTH-AD. Genetic and environmental influences on reliable  LTH-AD were examined using structural equation models.
 Reliability of the diagnosis of LTH-AD was moderate  (κ = 0.54) and was predicted by the number of AD symptoms, treatment  seeking, duration of most severe episode, and a great deal of time spent to  obtain, use, or recover from alcohol use (DSM-IV AD criterion #5). Using an  index of caseness, heritability of LTH-AD increased as a function of diagnostic  confidence. Accounting for errors of measurement in a multivariate twin model,  the heritability of LTH-AD increased from 55 to 71%.
 Reliably diagnosed LTH-AD can be predicted by  characteristics relevant to the disorder. LTH-AD appears to be a moderately  reliable disorder of high heritability.
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Request Reprint E-Mail: eivind.ystrom@fhi.no

 
