Women's risk of attempting suicide may be influenced by their mothers and sisters

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Photo by Ben White on Unsplash

***This media release contains information some readers may find distressing as it refers to data about mental health, suicide and self-harm. If you or anyone you know needs help, support is available now. Call Lifeline (Aus) on 131 114 or Beyond Blue on 1300 22 4636, or Lifeline (NZ) on 0800 543 354. ***

More women than men attempt suicide, and this higher risk may in part be explained by shared family factors and the influence of mothers and sisters on a woman's risk, according to international research. The study looked at the differences in the risk of suicide attempts between men and women and found that genetics alone doesn't explain the higher risk among women. They found that suicide attempts tended to cluster among females in families, especially among mothers and sisters, suggesting the shared family environment or other social factors may be impacting women more than men.

News release

From: BMJ Group

First degree female relatives’ suicidal intentions may influence women’s suicide risk

Sex specific effects of shared familial environment and other social factors may be key

Genetic factors only partly explain observed sex difference in suicidal behaviours

A woman’s suicide risk may be influenced by the suicidal intention of her female first degree relatives, with sex specific effects of a shared familial environment and possibly other social factors having a key role, finds a large population study published in the online journal BMJ Mental Health.

While genetic factors strongly influence a person’s risk of suicide, they don’t fully explain the observed sex differences in suicidal behaviours, whereby males die by suicide more often than females, but females attempt suicide around twice as often as males, say the researchers.

Worldwide, around 700,000 lives are lost to suicide every year, with notable sex differences in suicide attempts and deaths. But how much of these differences are influenced by genetic factors isn’t clear, they add.

To explore this further, the researchers drew on data from Swedish population registers, covering hospital admissions, specialist diagnoses, and cause of death for over 3 million people born between 1963 and 1998 (and their parents, full, and half siblings).

Their mental health and any suicide attempts were tracked from the age 10 until the end of 2019, when they would have been at least 21.

At the end of this period, almost half of the birth cohort were women (49%) and the ages of the entire cohort ranged from 21 to 57, with minimal difference between the sexes.

In all, 89,278 (3%) people had made at least one suicide attempt, over half (55%) of whom were women; and 126,411 (just over 4%) had self-harmed, half (50%) of whom were women.

More women than men attempted suicide: 3.3% vs 2.6%. But the sex difference in the proportion of those who self-harmed was minimal at just over 4%.

Suicide attempts were more common among those with psychiatric disorders than among those without: 76% vs 15%. Psychiatric disorders were also more common among women who attempted suicide than among men who did so.

To gauge familial clustering, the researchers focused on 5 types of familial relationships: mother-child; father–child; full siblings; maternal half siblings; and paternal half siblings.

In all, 3,653,013 mother–child pairs, 3,477,548 father–child pairs, 4,992,249 full sibling pairs, 908,740 maternal half sibling pairs and 1,164,125 paternal half sibling pairs were included in familial risk analyses.

In both sexes, suicide attempt risk clustered within families. It was higher among

relatives of people who had attempted suicide themselves than it was among relatives of those who hadn’t. This was particularly evident in mother–child pairs where the risk was more than 3 times higher.

It was also higher among first degree relatives than among second degree relatives (half siblings).

The highest risk (nearly 4 times higher) was observed in sisters. And risks were generally higher in mother–daughter pairs and sisters than among father–son pairs and brothers.

A greater degree of clustering of suicide attempts was observed among same sex relatives than among different sex relatives.

To gauge the influence of genetic factors, the researchers included 2,143,644 unique full sibling pairs and 343,075 unique maternal half sibling pairs in their analysis.

This showed that a sizeable proportion (42%) of suicide attempt risk was heritable, which didn’t differ significantly between the sexes. Shared environmental factors were associated with a small but statistically significant proportion of the risk (around 4%).

There was a moderate to strong genetic risk associated with psychiatric disorders, with the strongest association observed for substance misuse.

This is an observational study, and as such, no firm conclusions can be drawn about cause and effect. And the researchers acknowledge that their study included relatively young people born in, and/or migrating to, Sweden in childhood, so may not be more widely applicable to other groupings.

“These findings reveal complex genetic and environmental influences on suicide attempt,” they suggest.

“Taken together, our findings do not support the hypothesis that genetic factors explain the higher incidence of suicide attempts in females. Non-genetic factors—such as hormonal, neurobiological and environmental interactions—may underlie sex-specific vulnerabilities to suicide attempt,” they add.

They conclude: “We observed stronger familial aggregation among females and same-sex first-degree relatives, even though overall heritability of suicide attempts did not differ by sex, suggesting potential sex-specific effects of shared familial environment and possibly other social factors.

“While genetic factors significantly influence suicide attempt risk, they do not fully account for observed sex differences—underscoring the need to investigate non-genetic factors and gene–environment interactions.”

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Research BMJ Group, Web page Please link to the article in online versions of your report (the URL will go live after the embargo ends).
Journal/
conference:
BMJ Mental Health
Research:Paper
Organisation/s: Karolinska Institutet, Sweden
Funder: This study was supported by: The US National Institutes of Mental Health (R01MH123724 to PFS, YL; R56MH129437, R01MH120170, R01MH124871 to CMB); the Swedish Research Council (Vetenskapsrådet, awards D0886501 to PFS, 2021-02615 to YL; 538-2013- 8864 to CMB; 2022-00126 to AB); the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation program (grant agreement 964874 to YL); the European Research Council (grant 101042183 to YL); NordForsk (University Cooperation Grant, PreciMENT, grant 164218 to FF; grant 147386 to AB); the Suicide Prevention Institute at the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, NC, USA (to PFS grant N/A); the American Foundation for Suicide Prevention (DIG-1- 037- 19 to BMD; BSG-0- 034- 21 to CR). The funders had no role in considering the study design or in the collection, analysis, interpretation of data, writing of the report, or decision to submit the article for publication.
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