The content on this page was provided by an independent third party and syndicated by XPR Media. Members of the editorial and news staff of the USA TODAY Network were not involved in the creation of this content.

Study of two million people: Inherited risk for mental illness spills across diagnostic lines far more than realized

Massive Swedish study of over two million people reveals that genetic risk for mental illness often points toward multiple disorders, not just the one diagnosed

Genetic specificity is not some abstract property locked inside the genome. We have been debating whether psychiatric disorders are truly distinct since the 1800s. Now we can put numbers on it.”
— Dr. Kenneth S. Kendler, Virginia Commonwealth University

RICHMOND, VA, UNITED STATES, March 3, 2026 /EINPresswire.com/ — There is a question that has haunted psychiatry since before it had a name, back when the alienists in their frock coats were still debating whether madness ran in families or simply accumulated there like dust. The question is deceptively simple. When a person inherits a vulnerability to mental illness, does that vulnerability have an address? Does it point, with any precision, toward the specific disorder that eventually appears on the chart? Or does it scatter, landing across the whole landscape of the mind like seed thrown from a moving hand?

A sweeping new study published in Genomic Psychiatry has, for the first time, put actual numbers on the answer. The numbers are not what most clinicians expected.

Dr. Kenneth S. Kendler, a psychiatric geneticist at Virginia Commonwealth University, led a team that analyzed data from more than two million individuals born in Sweden between 1950 and 1995. The dataset drew from national patient registries and primary care records covering essentially the entire population. The team selected nine major psychiatric and substance use disorders: schizophrenia, bipolar disorder, major depression, anxiety disorder, PTSD, ADHD, autism spectrum disorder, alcohol use disorder, and drug use disorder. For each one, they calculated a measure they call genetic specificity: the percentage of total inherited risk in a person with a given diagnosis that actually points toward that diagnosis and not toward the others.

Think of it this way. If you have been diagnosed with depression, some of your genetic risk factors genuinely predispose you to depression. But some of them, possibly most of them, actually predispose you to anxiety, or substance use problems, or ADHD, or conditions your doctor never mentioned. Genetic specificity tells you what fraction of the total genetic signal is truly about the diagnosis on your chart.

The results arranged themselves into a hierarchy that nobody had previously quantified, and it was stark. Schizophrenia sat at the top with a genetic specificity of 73.1%, meaning nearly three quarters of the aggregate genetic risk carried by individuals with schizophrenia coded exclusively for schizophrenia. Whatever else it may be, schizophrenia is, genetically speaking, overwhelmingly its own thing. Bipolar disorder followed at 54.8%. Alcohol use disorder came in at 54.1%.

A middle tier held some surprises. ADHD registered 48.2%, autism spectrum disorder 47.5%, and PTSD 47.4%. Three conditions that look nothing alike in a clinic waiting room turned out to occupy nearly identical genetic ground.

Then came the conditions whose genetic identities were the most blurred. Major depression landed at 41.1%. Anxiety disorder at 38.6%. And drug use disorder, at the bottom of the list, registered a mere 29.5%. That last number deserves a pause. It means that for every unit of genetic risk carried by someone diagnosed with drug use disorder, less than a third of it is actually about drugs. The remaining two thirds scatter across schizophrenia, depression, ADHD, and the other conditions in the panel. The genes do not know what the clinician wrote on the form.

“What surprised us was the sheer range,” said Dr. Kenneth S. Kendler, VIPBG Distinguished Professor of Psychiatry at Virginia Commonwealth University and corresponding author of the study. “Schizophrenia carries a genetic signature that is overwhelmingly its own. Drug use disorder, by contrast, looks more like a downstream expression of genetic risks that cut across many conditions. That difference has real implications for how we design genetic studies and how we think about diagnostic categories.”

Could this finding reshape how doctors think about the boundaries between one mental illness and another? Could it mean that some of the categories clinicians spend entire careers distinguishing are, at the genetic level, less distinct than anyone assumed? The data strongly suggest yes.
But the most provocative finding may be this: genetic specificity is not fixed. It moves. It shifts, sometimes dramatically, depending on three features that any clinician can observe. Age at onset. Number of recurrent episodes. And where the patient receives treatment.

Bipolar disorder showed the widest swings. Patients whose illness began early in life had substantially higher genetic specificity than those with late onset, and the drop-off was steep. Patients with many recurrent episodes were far more genetically specific than those with few. And here is where it gets clinically fascinating: bipolar patients treated in hospitals carried a genetic specificity of 63%, while those seen only in primary care registered just 31%, a gap of more than thirty percentage points (p PTSD moved in the opposite direction. Its genetic specificity actually increased with later age at onset and was highest among individuals treated only in primary care, at 53%, compared with 41% for those who were hospitalized. The reasons likely differ: hospitalized PTSD may involve more comorbid conditions that dilute the disorder-specific signal.

For all nine disorders without exception, greater recurrence was associated with higher genetic specificity. The effect was most pronounced for bipolar disorder and ADHD. The logic is intuitive once you see it: a person who keeps returning to the same illness, episode after episode, year after year, probably carries genes that are genuinely aimed at that illness, rather than a generalized vulnerability that happened to land there once by circumstance.

What does this mean for the family doctor in a small town who sees a forty-five-year-old patient walk in with a first episode of depression? Is that patient genetically the same as a twenty-year-old with recurrent depression? The data say no. And the difference is not subtle.

“Genetic specificity is not some abstract property locked inside the genome,” Dr. Kendler explained. “It moves. It responds to clinical features that every psychiatrist can observe at the bedside. A hospitalized bipolar patient and one seen only in primary care carry substantially different levels of genetic specificity.”

One of the most intellectually satisfying puzzles in the study involves the contrasting behavior of depression and bipolar disorder at the hospital door. For bipolar disorder, hospitalization concentrates the genetic signal. It makes sense: the manic episode is what drives the admission, and mania is the core of the disorder. But for depression, hospitalization does the opposite. Hospitalized depression cases were less genetically specific than those treated in primary care. The researchers propose a reason that will resonate with anyone who has worked in an emergency room: what brings a depressed person to the hospital is often not the depth of the sadness itself but impulsive behavior, suicidal crises, and substance-related emergencies, all of which reflect elevated genetic risk for externalizing disorders like ADHD and substance use. The depression you see in primary care, the quieter kind, may carry a purer genetic signal for mood pathology.

The question practically asks itself. Should researchers studying the genetics of depression be recruiting from family medicine clinics rather than inpatient psychiatric units? Would that produce cleaner, more replicable genetic findings? The authors do not say so explicitly, but the data lean hard in that direction.
The investigators stress-tested their findings with the care of engineers checking a bridge. Sensitivity analyses explored what happened when they removed patients who carried more than one diagnosis. Stripping out the 6.0% of depression cases who also had a lifetime bipolar diagnosis barely moved the specificity estimate, from 41.1% to 41.8%. Similar corrections for the overlap between schizophrenia and bipolar disorder produced equally small shifts. The hierarchy held.

Sex-stratified analyses showed that genetic specificities were remarkably similar between men and women for most conditions. The two clear exceptions were alcohol use disorder and drug use disorder, where men showed substantially higher genetic specificities (p

The results converge compellingly with recent molecular genetics. A large multivariate study by Grotzinger and colleagues, published in Nature in 2026, examined fourteen psychiatric disorders using polygenic risk scores and identified a general psychopathology factor, a kind of master dial for mental illness liability. Their internalizing factor, which included major depression, anxiety disorder, and PTSD, the three conditions with the lowest genetic specificity in Dr. Kendler’s analysis, shared more than 90% of its genetic variance with that general factor. The schizophrenia-bipolar factor shared only 35%. Two entirely different research groups, using entirely different methods and different populations, arrived at the same conclusion: some psychiatric disorders have sharp genetic borders, and some do not.

The study carries honest limitations. It relies on Swedish national registry data, not structured diagnostic interviews conducted by researchers. Diagnostic practices vary across clinicians and eras. The population studied was Swedish-born individuals from Swedish-born parents, and whether the same hierarchy would appear in other ethnic and geographic populations remains unknown. The family genetic risk scores used here differ fundamentally from the polygenic risk scores derived from DNA sequencing, although the Kendler team has previously shown that the two approaches behave consistently.

There is also a deeper structural point worth noting. Genetic specificity is partly shaped by comorbidity. A disorder that is only moderately heritable and that frequently co-occurs with other conditions, as depression does with anxiety and substance use, will almost inevitably show lower specificity. A highly heritable disorder with relatively little comorbidity, like schizophrenia, will show high specificity. Both predictions are borne out in the data. This does not diminish the findings. It places them in context.

Could replication in non-Scandinavian cohorts reveal different hierarchies? Might populations with different genetic architectures or healthcare systems produce different patterns? These remain open questions of real significance.

“We have been debating whether psychiatric disorders are truly distinct since the 1800s,” Dr. Kendler reflected. “Now we can actually put numbers on it. Some of our diagnostic categories carve nature much more cleanly at the genetic joints than others, and clinicians and researchers alike need to reckon with that.”
If genetic specificity varies predictably with observable clinical features, then researchers designing genetic studies could begin selecting participants to sharpen or broaden the signal, depending on what they are trying to find. Clinicians might someday use specificity-related markers, age at onset, recurrence patterns, treatment history, to refine prognosis and guide treatment. And the nosologists, the scientists who build the diagnostic manuals that every doctor in the country consults, now have a quantitative framework for asking the most uncomfortable question in their field: how genetically real are the categories we have been using?

The sample sizes were formidable. The depression cohort alone included 674,955 individuals. Schizophrenia comprised 18,348. The total dataset encompassed more than two million diagnostic records with full population coverage.

This peer-reviewed research represents a significant advance in psychiatric genetics, offering new insights into the genetic architecture of mental illness through rigorous population-based investigation. The findings challenge existing assumptions about diagnostic boundaries by demonstrating that genetic specificity varies widely across disorders and is modifiable by clinical features. By employing family genetic risk scores calculated from national Swedish registries encompassing over two million affected individuals, the research team has generated data that not only advances fundamental knowledge but suggests practical applications in genetic study design and clinical stratification. The interdisciplinary collaboration between psychiatric genetics at Virginia Commonwealth University and primary care epidemiology at Lund University demonstrates the power of combining diverse expertise to tackle complex scientific questions.

This project was supported in part by NIH grants R01DA030005, R01MH139865 and R01AA023534 and the Swedish Research Council (2024-02796 and 2021-06467).

The Research Article in Genomic Psychiatry titled “The specificity of genetic risk for psychiatric and substance use disorders: Its modification by age at onset, recurrence, and site of treatment” is freely available via Open Access on 3 March 2026 in Genomic Psychiatry at the following hyperlink: https://doi.org/10.61373/gp026a.0024.

About Genomic Psychiatry: Genomic Psychiatry: Advancing Science from Genes to Society (ISSN: 2997-2388, online and 2997-254X, print) represents a paradigm shift in genetics journals by interweaving advances in genomics and genetics with progress in all other areas of contemporary psychiatry. Genomic Psychiatry publishes medical research articles of the highest quality from any area within the continuum that goes from genes and molecules to neuroscience, clinical psychiatry, and public health.

Visit the Genomic Press Virtual Library: https://issues.genomicpress.com/bookcase/gtvov/

Our full website is at: https://genomicpress.com/

Ma-Li Wong
Genomic Press
mali.wong@genomicpress.com

Legal Disclaimer:

EIN Presswire provides this news content “as is” without warranty of any kind. We do not accept any responsibility or liability
for the accuracy, content, images, videos, licenses, completeness, legality, or reliability of the information contained in this
article. If you have any complaints or copyright issues related to this article, kindly contact the author above.

Information contained on this page is provided by an independent third-party content provider. XPRMedia and this Site make no warranties or representations in connection therewith. If you are affiliated with this page and would like it removed please contact pressreleases@xpr.media

Why Some Cats Lose Their Appetite and Why ZenaPet Is Part of the Broader Pet Wellness Conversation

Why Some Cats Lose Their Appetite and Why ZenaPet Is Part of the Broader Pet Wellness Conversation

Costa Mesa, California – March 09, 2026 – PRESSADVANTAGE – A cat that suddenly shows little interest in food can

March 9, 2026

GovCore Opens Oklahoma City Office to Strengthen Local Client Support

GovCore Opens Oklahoma City Office to Strengthen Local Client Support

Regulatory technology company opens Oklahoma City office at Arvest Tower, deepening its commitment to delivering

March 8, 2026

Artivist Jacqueline Rudolph to Exhibit Powerful Portraits and Sculptural Works at ArtExpo New York 2026

Artivist Jacqueline Rudolph to Exhibit Powerful Portraits and Sculptural Works at ArtExpo New York 2026

Celebrated Santa Fe-based artist brings socially conscious portraiture and activist-driven artwork to Manhattan's

March 8, 2026

Why Orthodontists Still Pursue Board Certification in an Era of Modern Orthodontics

Why Orthodontists Still Pursue Board Certification in an Era of Modern Orthodontics

Board certification through the American Board of Orthodontics remains a voluntary but respected credential signaling

March 8, 2026

John W. Crane Qualifies for MDRT’s Top of the Table

John W. Crane Qualifies for MDRT’s Top of the Table

Financial advisor John W. Crane earns MDRT Top of the Table while helping high-income families simplify saving, protect

March 8, 2026

Entrepreneur Raymond Palmer Reflects on Ikigai Journey Behind One Dog One Bone

Entrepreneur Raymond Palmer Reflects on Ikigai Journey Behind One Dog One Bone

Inventor of the Bone Pool shares how creativity, craftsmanship, and purpose shaped a life’s work with dogs Being able

March 8, 2026

CTO Spotlights Women’s Impact in Tourism on International Women’s Day

CTO Spotlights Women’s Impact in Tourism on International Women’s Day

BRIDGETOWN, BARBADOS, March 8, 2026 /EINPresswire.com/ — The Caribbean Tourism Organization (CTO) joined the global

March 8, 2026

Author Jane-Marie Auret Explores Immigration, Identity, and Digital Age Struggles in Screens and the Ego

Author Jane-Marie Auret Explores Immigration, Identity, and Digital Age Struggles in Screens and the Ego

Literary work explores immigration, university life, emotional struggle, and spiritual questions, shaping a digitally

March 8, 2026

Webtage LLC Sets a New Industry Standard with AI, GEO, and AEO-Integrated SEO Solutions for Local and Global Businesses

Webtage LLC Sets a New Industry Standard with AI, GEO, and AEO-Integrated SEO Solutions for Local and Global Businesses

Webtage LLC launches a new AI, GEO, and AEO powered SEO framework to help businesses adapt to AI search, conversational

March 8, 2026

New Molecular Switch that Boosts Tooth Regeneration Discovered

New Molecular Switch that Boosts Tooth Regeneration Discovered

Researchers uncover how SMAD7 directly activates Wnt signaling to promote dental pulp stem cell regeneration CHINA,

March 8, 2026

Rogue Collective Names Clara Woods as Its First Artist in Residence on International Women’s Day

Rogue Collective Names Clara Woods as Its First Artist in Residence on International Women’s Day

Rogue United Expands Commitment to Art as Innovation, Resilience and Cultural Impact; Woods Named Official Artist of

March 8, 2026

LongevityNext.com Relaunches as a Longevity Science, Business & Policy Publication

LongevityNext.com Relaunches as a Longevity Science, Business & Policy Publication

The relaunched site will cover longevity research, therapeutics, biomarkers, clinics, regulation, capital and data

March 8, 2026

Eleven-Year-Old Fashion Designer, Actor Charlie LeRoy Wins First ‘Be A Star With A Star’ Contest Through eZWay Network

Eleven-Year-Old Fashion Designer, Actor Charlie LeRoy Wins First ‘Be A Star With A Star’ Contest Through eZWay Network

A Bright Future Ahead HOLLYWOOD, CA, UNITED STATES, March 8, 2026 /EINPresswire.com/ — Eleven-year-old fashion

March 8, 2026

BLZ Fire Skids Launches UTV and Truck Fire Suppression Systems Featuring PolyPro™ Construction and Redline Pumps

BLZ Fire Skids Launches UTV and Truck Fire Suppression Systems Featuring PolyPro™ Construction and Redline Pumps

Mobile fire suppression systems for UTVs and trucks featuring PolyPro™ tanks and BLZ Redline pumps for rapid response.

March 8, 2026

Alternative to Meds Center Highlights Long-Term Fanapt Risks and Individualized Antipsychotic Tapering Support

Alternative to Meds Center Highlights Long-Term Fanapt Risks and Individualized Antipsychotic Tapering Support

Sedona inpatient program educates on iloperidone side effects, anticholinergic burden, and holistic alternatives for

March 8, 2026

Lan Tianyang Introduces Chinese Opera Vocal Techniques Into Global Pop Singing Training

Lan Tianyang Introduces Chinese Opera Vocal Techniques Into Global Pop Singing Training

Chinese opera vocal techniques enter modern pop singing training worldwide. Chinese opera contains centuries of vocal

March 8, 2026

KLOTA Expands E-Commerce Toolkit with Expert-Led SEO and Google Ads Audit Services

KLOTA Expands E-Commerce Toolkit with Expert-Led SEO and Google Ads Audit Services

Fixed-price, manual audits with prioritized action plans join KLOTA’s growing suite of diagnostic tools for online

March 8, 2026

When a ‘Salt Room’ Has No Salt on the Walls: Experts Warn Consumers About a Growing Halotherapy Problem

When a ‘Salt Room’ Has No Salt on the Walls: Experts Warn Consumers About a Growing Halotherapy Problem

Dr. Margaret Smiechowski explains why real salt rooms must include salt walls, proper climate control, and correct

March 8, 2026

Southern Live Oak Wellness Expands Partial Hospitalization Program in Atlanta and South Georgia

Southern Live Oak Wellness Expands Partial Hospitalization Program in Atlanta and South Georgia

Southern Live Oak Wellness provides a structured Partial Hospitalization Program in Atlanta alongside residential and

March 8, 2026

Instacoins Concierge Launches ‘Finesse’ Initiative on International Women’s Day

Instacoins Concierge Launches ‘Finesse’ Initiative on International Women’s Day

Celebrating women who shape decisions, travel, and lifestyle, Finesse by Instacoins provides dedicated concierge

March 8, 2026

MonsGeek Introduces TMR MagMech Magnetic Keyboards: Hybrid Mechanical and Magnetic Switches in One Keyboard

MonsGeek Introduces TMR MagMech Magnetic Keyboards: Hybrid Mechanical and Magnetic Switches in One Keyboard

MonsGeek unveils TMR MagMech keyboards, combining mechanical and magnetic switches in a hybrid design for precision,

March 8, 2026

Advanced eClinical Training Expands Nationwide Clinical Partner Network, Strengthening Medical Assistant Pipeline

Advanced eClinical Training Expands Nationwide Clinical Partner Network, Strengthening Medical Assistant Pipeline

ACT expands its network of 1,000+ healthcare partners nationwide – extern-to-hire workforce pathways for medical

March 8, 2026

Monkey Dooz Inks First Franchisee, Bringing Award-Winning Children’s Salon Concept to Missouri

Monkey Dooz Inks First Franchisee, Bringing Award-Winning Children’s Salon Concept to Missouri

Family-focused brand known for whimsical haircut experiences, philanthropic impact & national recognition signs

March 8, 2026

Figment Design Promotes Robert Santiago to Marketing Channels Manager

Figment Design Promotes Robert Santiago to Marketing Channels Manager

MIRAMAR, FL, UNITED STATES, March 8, 2026 /EINPresswire.com/ — Figment Design, a South Florida agency specializing in

March 8, 2026

Lauren Tobey’s Spiraling into Control Takes Over Times Square, Reframing Trauma, Burnout, and the Myth of ‘Being Fine’

Lauren Tobey’s Spiraling into Control Takes Over Times Square, Reframing Trauma, Burnout, and the Myth of ‘Being Fine’

Lauren Tobey's Spiraling into Control, featured in Times Square, merges memoir and neuroscience to redefine trauma,

March 8, 2026

An Artistic Expedition Across the Storm: ‘Golden Bell Laureates’ Shine at Carnegie Hall

An Artistic Expedition Across the Storm: ‘Golden Bell Laureates’ Shine at Carnegie Hall

Defying the Storm: The Story of an Artistic Expedition from Beijing to New York. NEW YORK, NY, UNITED STATES, March 8,

March 8, 2026

Dr. Juan P. Chisholm, Author of Mission Possible is an Audience Choice Award Winner for Mission Possible Book Award Film

Dr. Juan P. Chisholm, Author of Mission Possible is an Audience Choice Award Winner for Mission Possible Book Award Film

It is an incredible honor to have our movie premiered at the Black Art & Film Festival and be recognized as the

March 8, 2026

Hosted.com Expands SSL Certificate Options to Strengthen Website Security

Hosted.com Expands SSL Certificate Options to Strengthen Website Security

Hosted.com expands its SSL certificate offerings, providing simplified encryption solutions to help improve website

March 8, 2026

Global Finance Enters ‘End of Predictability’ as Demand for Roger Spitz’s Uncertainty Keynotes Surges

Global Finance Enters ‘End of Predictability’ as Demand for Roger Spitz’s Uncertainty Keynotes Surges

Former M&A Banker and Top-Ranked Futurist Roger Spitz Decodes Era of “Metaruptions” as Boards across Global Finance

March 8, 2026

Southern Live Oak Wellness Expands Residential Mental Health Programs Across Atlanta and South Georgia

Southern Live Oak Wellness Expands Residential Mental Health Programs Across Atlanta and South Georgia

Southern Live Oak Wellness provides evidence-based residential mental health programs, therapy, and outpatient services

March 8, 2026

Southern Live Oak Wellness Expands PTSD Treatment for Teens in Atlanta and South Georgia

Southern Live Oak Wellness Expands PTSD Treatment for Teens in Atlanta and South Georgia

Southern Live Oak Wellness provides specialized PTSD treatment for teens through residential care, therapy programs,

March 8, 2026

Southern Live Oak Wellness Expands Personality Disorders Treatment in Atlanta and South Georgia

Southern Live Oak Wellness Expands Personality Disorders Treatment in Atlanta and South Georgia

Southern Live Oak Wellness offers specialized personality disorder treatment, residential care, and therapy programs

March 8, 2026

Martinique Highlights Airlift Momentum and Market Growth at South Florida Travel & Adventure Show

Martinique Highlights Airlift Momentum and Market Growth at South Florida Travel & Adventure Show

FORT LAUDERDALE, FL, UNITED STATES, March 8, 2026 /EINPresswire.com/ — The Martinique Tourism Authority highlighted

March 8, 2026

As Real Estate Discovery Shifts Toward Video, Some Brokerages Are Exploring a New Digital Front Door

As Real Estate Discovery Shifts Toward Video, Some Brokerages Are Exploring a New Digital Front Door

The ReelMap connects agent video content to geographic maps, creating a discovery layer that allows buyers to explore

March 8, 2026

SunTrust Remodeling Expands Professional Exterior Remodeling Services Across California

SunTrust Remodeling Expands Professional Exterior Remodeling Services Across California

SunTrust Remodeling strengthens exterior renovation services including roofing, siding, windows, and exterior painting

March 8, 2026

Women-Owned GMR Transcription Releases Women’s Day Report on the Legacy of Women in Documentation

Women-Owned GMR Transcription Releases Women’s Day Report on the Legacy of Women in Documentation

GMR Transcription marks Women’s Day with a report highlighting women’s historic role in documentation and examining the

March 8, 2026

Miramar Pet Boarding Facility Hits 165 Five-Star Reviews — Pet Parents Say It’s Nothing Like a Kennel

Miramar Pet Boarding Facility Hits 165 Five-Star Reviews — Pet Parents Say It’s Nothing Like a Kennel

Four Paws Inn's cage-free home environment is winning over South Florida families who refused to settle for traditional

March 8, 2026

Fort Worth Roofer Helps Homeowners Fight Back Against Lowball Storm Damage Insurance Claims

Fort Worth Roofer Helps Homeowners Fight Back Against Lowball Storm Damage Insurance Claims

Veteran Brothers Roofing & Restoration is guiding North Texas homeowners through complex insurance claim processes

March 8, 2026

Career Coach Barry Simpson Launches ‘It’s Not About You,’ a New Guide to Getting Hired

Career Coach Barry Simpson Launches ‘It’s Not About You,’ a New Guide to Getting Hired

New book and companion web app challenge job seekers to stop focusing on what they want and start thinking about what

March 8, 2026

Auntie Atom: The Final Harvest Announces 2026 Launch Date for New Roblox Horror Experience

Auntie Atom: The Final Harvest Announces 2026 Launch Date for New Roblox Horror Experience

Chicago, Illinois – Auntie Atom: The Final Harvest announces the official 2026 release of its upcoming horror game on

March 8, 2026