PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Genetic study links impulsive decision making to a wide range of health and psychiatric risks

Analysis of 135,000 participants reveals 11 genetic regions tied to delayed gratification and shows shared biology with mental, cognitive and metabolic traits

2025-11-25
(Press-News.org) Researchers from University of California San Diego have identified 11 genetic regions linked to delay discounting — the tendency to prefer smaller, immediate rewards over larger, delayed ones — shedding new light on how impulsive decision-making relates to both mental and physical health. The study, published on Nov. 25, 2025 in Molecular Psychiatry, analyzed genome-wide data from 134,935 23andMe participants and found that the same genetic factors that influence impulsive decision-making also overlap with risks for conditions like obesity, diabetes and other metabolic health issues.

“Impulsive decision-making is something we all experience, but its biological roots have been surprisingly difficult to pin down,” said Sandra Sanchez-Roige, Ph.D., associate professor of psychiatry at UC San Diego School of Medicine and senior author of the study. “These findings show that delay discounting is not just a behavioral tendency, it is deeply intertwined with genetic pathways involved in brain development, cognition and physical health.”

Building on a previous genome-wide association study five times smaller, the team mapped 11 independent genetic regions and identified 93 candidate genes associated with delay discounting. Several of these genes were involved in dopamine signaling, neuronal growth metabolic pathways and brain structure — systems also implicated in psychiatric disorders, obesity, chronic pain and educational outcomes. Subsequent analyses found genetic correlations between delay discounting and 73 traits ranging from substance use and depression to gastrointestinal disorders and sleep duration.

The researchers also conducted a network analysis to determine which biological mechanisms are shared across traits. “We found clusters of overlapping pathways — particularly involving cognition, metabolism and externalizing behaviors — that may explain why delay discounting is a common feature across many mental health conditions,” said Abraham A. Palmer, Ph.D., professor and vice chair for basic research in the Department of Psychiatry at UC San Diego School of Medicine and co-author of the study. Additional analyses showed that many associations persisted even after adjusting for cognitive measures such as intelligence and educational attainment, indicating that delay discounting has a partially distinct genetic basis.

To explore downstream clinical impacts, the team developed polygenic scores for delay discounting and tested them in a hospital cohort of more than 66,000 individuals. “We identified that these scores, which represent the genetic tendency to favor smaller immediate rewards, were associated with 212 medical outcomes, including type 2 diabetes, chronic pain, ischemic heart disease, mood disorders and tobacco use disorder”, said first author Hayley Thorpe, Ph.D., a visiting scholar in Sanchez-Roige’s lab and postdoctoral researcher at Western University. “This highlights how impulsive decision-making may influence long-term health risk”.

“Understanding the genetic and biological roots of delay discounting opens up many new possibilities,” Sanchez-Roige said. “In the future, delay discounting could become a clinically useful marker, one that helps us improve behavioral and pharmacological treatments aimed at impulsivity.” Unlike many studies that examine the causes of specific disease, “these studies explore the genetic basis of trans-diagnostic genetic tendencies, which are the fundamental building blocks that influence people’s behavior throughout life and are interwoven with disease susceptibility, as well as economic and social outcomes” adds Palmer.

The authors note that while the study identifies promising genetic targets, future research should explore causal relationships and test whether modifying delay discounting can improve health outcomes. They also emphasize the need for replication of newly discovered genetic associations and for studies integrating environmental factors such as socioeconomic status.

“Delay discounting is measurable, highly heritable and relevant to many aspects of health,” Sanchez-Roige added. “By continuing to investigate this fundamental decision-making process, we may uncover new ways to prevent or treat a wide range of conditions.”

Link to full study: DOI: 10.1038/s41380-025-03356-8

Additional co-authors on the study include: Renata Cupertino, Shreya Reddy Pakala, Mariela Jennings, Jane Yang, John Meredith, Tiffany Greenwood, Sevim Bianchi, Laura Vilar-Ribó, Trey Ideker from UC San Diego; Pierre Fontanillas, and Sarah Elson from 23andMe, Inc.; Maria Niarchou and Lea Davis from Vanderbilt University Medical Center; James MacKillop from McMaster University; Harriet deWit from University of Chicago; Daniel Gustavson from University of Colorado Boulder; Travis Mallard from Harvard Medical School. 

The study was funded, in part, by the National Institutes of Health and the Tobacco-Related Disease Research Program.

Pierre Fontanillas, the 23andMe Research Team, and Sarah Elson were employed by 23andMe, Inc. and hold stock or stock options in 23andMe, Inc. The remaining authors have nothing to disclose.

END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Clinical trial using focused ultrasound with chemotherapy finds potential survival benefit for brain cancer patients

2025-11-25
Patients with the deadliest form of brain cancer, glioblastoma, who received MRI-guided focused ultrasound with standard-of-care chemotherapy had a nearly 40 percent increase in overall survival in a landmark trial of 34 patients led by University of Maryland School of Medicine (UMSOM) researchers. This is the first time researchers have demonstrated a potential survival benefit from using focused ultrasound to open the blood-brain barrier to improve delivery of chemotherapy to the tumor site in brain cancer patients after surgery. “Our results are very encouraging. Using focused ultrasound to open the ...

World-first platform for transparent, fair and equitable use of AI in healthcare

2025-11-25
Researchers have developed the world’s first real-world head-to-head testing platform to determine whether commercial artificial intelligence (AI) algorithms are fit for NHS use to detect disease in a fair, equitable, transparent and trustworthy way, using diabetic eye disease as the first example. They say that it removes any biases that can come from companies wanting to deploy their AI software in clinical settings, putting all companies on a level playing field. Currently, NHS AI algorithm selection focuses on cost-effectiveness and matching human performance. ...

New guideline standardizes outpatient care for adults recovering from traumatic brain injury

2025-11-24
Special Report Traumatic brain injury (TBI) affects millions of Americans each year and can result in long-lasting symptoms. Previously, outpatient TBI care lacked standardized guidance that could not apply uniformly to adults with TBI who could care for themselves after hospital discharge or who did not require hospital admission. The National Academies’ 2022 report on TBI identified this gap and called for coordinated follow-up care, leading to the formation of the Action Collaborative on TBI Care. The collaborative’s Clinical Practice Guideline Working Group synthesized and adapted recommendations from 18 existing evidence-based guidelines ...

Physician shortage in rural areas of the US worsened since 2017

2025-11-24
The national shortage of primary care physicians has been a concern for years, and a new study in the Annals of Family Medicine underscores how urgent the problem is and where the biggest pain point lies: in rural parts of the country that are seeing the largest population spikes in nearly a century. By studying the location of practicing family physicians across the U.S. from 2017 to 2023, authors found a year-over-year decrease in family physicians practicing in rural areas, with a net loss of 11% nationwide over the 7 years studied. The greatest losses were in the Northeast and fewest in the West.  There were 11,847 ...

Clinicians’ lack of adoption knowledge interferes with adoptees’ patient-clinician relationship

2025-11-24
Original Research  Background: Researchers examined health care challenges faced by adult adoptees and how being adopted affects relationships with their clinicians. U.S. adult adoptees completed a mixed-methods online survey. A total of 204 participants were included in the final analysis.  What This Study Found: Most participants described multiple types of adoption-related bias by clinicians: More than half of the participants reported clinicians made insensitive or inaccurate statements related to adoption (68%), ignored or dismissed adoption-related concerns (60%), or made them feel uncomfortable, unwelcome, or unsupported ...

Tip sheet and summaries Annals of Family Medicine November/December 2025

2025-11-24
Original Research Older Adults Who See the Same Primary Care Physician Have Fewer Preventable Hospitalizations Background: Continuity of care has been linked with fewer hospitalizations. This study examined whether better continuity is helpful for acute, potentially preventable hospitalizations that might be avoided with regular care. Researchers analyzed data for 54,376 adults aged 45 years and older from the long-term “45 and Up Study” in New South Wales, Australia. Survey responses were linked with Medicare general practitioner claims and hospital admission ...

General practitioners say trust in patients deepens over time

2025-11-24
Original Research Background: In this study, researchers aimed to understand how general practitioners experience trust in their patients, and how that trust affects patient care. Researchers interviewed 25 general practitioners across Australia.  What This Study Found: Interviewees ranged from 28 to 65 years old. Three themes described general practitioners’ trust in patients:  General practitioners’ trust in patients was an assumed starting point. General practitioners expressed a lack of trust in some complex ...

Older adults who see the same primary care physician have fewer preventable hospitalizations

2025-11-24
Original Research Background: Continuity of care has been linked with fewer hospitalizations. This study examined whether better continuity is helpful for acute, potentially preventable hospitalizations that might be avoided with regular care. Researchers analyzed data for 54,376 adults aged 45 years and older from the long-term “45 and Up Study” in New South Wales, Australia. Survey responses were linked with Medicare general practitioner claims and hospital admission records from 2007 to 2017. Researchers used a double machine learning approach to separate the effect of continuity of care from the ...

Young European family doctors show moderate readiness for artificial intelligence but knowledge gaps limit AI use

2025-11-24
Research Brief  Background: In this study, researchers surveyed 134 young family physicians from 20 European countries to understand how ready they are to use AI in primary care. The web survey used the Medical AI Readiness Scale (MAIRS), which rates four areas: cognition (understanding), ability (skills), vision (future value), and ethics. The maximum possible score is 110, with higher scores indicating greater readiness. What This Study Found: Overall readiness was moderate (median 69/110) with wide variation. About one-quarter of participants said they never use AI in family medicine, ...

New report presents recommendations to strengthen primary care for Latino patients with chronic conditions

2025-11-24
Special Report Latinos face significant health disparities, especially in chronic conditions such as cardiovascular disease, diabetes, asthma, and cancer. Primary care clinicians play a critical role in managing and preventing these diseases, yet Latinos face multiple barriers to quality care. In April 2024, the Primary Care Latino Equity Research (PRIMER) Center convened the Latino Primary Care Summit on “Chronic Conditions in Latinos: Trends, Innovations and Care for the Future.” This special report summarizes the discussions at the summit and ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Prevalence of dysfunctional breathing in the Japanese community and the involvement of tobacco use status: The JASTIS study 2024

Genetic study links impulsive decision making to a wide range of health and psychiatric risks

Clinical trial using focused ultrasound with chemotherapy finds potential survival benefit for brain cancer patients

World-first platform for transparent, fair and equitable use of AI in healthcare

New guideline standardizes outpatient care for adults recovering from traumatic brain injury

Physician shortage in rural areas of the US worsened since 2017

Clinicians’ lack of adoption knowledge interferes with adoptees’ patient-clinician relationship

Tip sheet and summaries Annals of Family Medicine November/December 2025

General practitioners say trust in patients deepens over time

Older adults who see the same primary care physician have fewer preventable hospitalizations

Young European family doctors show moderate readiness for artificial intelligence but knowledge gaps limit AI use

New report presents recommendations to strengthen primary care for Latino patients with chronic conditions

Study finds nationwide decline in rural family physicians

New public dataset maps Medicare home health use

Innovative strategy trains bilingual clinic staff as dual-role medical interpreters to bridge language gaps in primary care

Higher glycemic index linked to higher lung cancer risk

Metabolism, not just weight, improved when older adults reduced ultra-processed food intake

New study identifies key mechanism driving HIV-associated immune suppression 

Connections with nature in protected areas

Rodriguez and Phadatare selected for SME's 30 Under 30

Nontraditional benefits play key role in retaining the under-35 government health worker

UC Irvine-led study finds global embrace of integrative cancer care

From shiloh shepherds to chihuahuas, study finds that the majority of modern dogs have detectable wolf ancestry

Ancient wolves on remote Baltic Sea island reveal link to prehistoric humans

Scientists detect new climate pattern in the tropics

‘Mental model’ approach shows promise in reducing susceptibility to misconceptions about mRNA vaccination

Want actionable climate knowledge at scale? Consider these three pathways

Blood formation: Two systems with different competencies

Golden retriever and human behaviours are driven by same genes

Calcium-sensitive switch boosts the efficacy of cancer drugs

[Press-News.org] Genetic study links impulsive decision making to a wide range of health and psychiatric risks
Analysis of 135,000 participants reveals 11 genetic regions tied to delayed gratification and shows shared biology with mental, cognitive and metabolic traits