Why timing matters so much
Substance use in teens is one of the biggest worries in public health today. About 1 in 3 high school students has tried alcohol. Nicotine vaping continues to rise. Cannabis use is climbing in many states.
The earlier a teen starts, the higher the risk of long-term problems. These include addiction, mental health struggles, and trouble in school.
But here's what's frustrating. Most prevention programs treat every teen the same. They don't know which kids are most likely to start early, and which can handle waiting.
The old way missed a key clue
Until now, most large DNA studies looked at substance use in a simple yes-or-no way. Did the teen ever try it? That's it.
But here's the twist. That approach throws away a huge piece of the puzzle.
A 14-year-old who starts drinking is very different from someone who waits until 22. Both count as "yes." But their genes, their brains, and their risks may be very different.
This new study changed the question. Instead of asking if, it asked when.
Thinking of genes like a starting gun
Imagine a race where every runner is waiting at the starting line. The gun goes off at different times for each runner based on tiny signals only they can hear.
That's how researchers now think about genes and substance use. Your DNA may act like a quiet signal that nudges some teens toward earlier experimentation, and helps others hold back longer.
The scientists used a method called a "survival GWAS." In plain English: they scanned the entire genome and looked at how long each teen went before trying a substance. This gave them a much richer view than the old yes-or-no method.
What the study looked at
The team used data from the ABCD Study. This is one of the largest long-term studies of American kids ever done. It follows thousands of children through their teen years.
They looked at four outcomes: alcohol, nicotine, cannabis, and any substance use. They also studied three ancestry groups (European, African, and Hispanic) to make sure findings worked across backgrounds.
What they found in the DNA
The researchers spotted several genetic signals linked to when teens first tried substances. For nicotine, they found one signal strong enough to meet the strictest scientific standard.
Even more interesting: some genetic signals overlapped between alcohol and general substance use. This supports an idea scientists have had for years: there's a shared "risk profile" that pushes some kids toward experimenting with many things.
But other signals were specific to just one substance. That means nicotine risk may not look the same as cannabis risk, at least in our DNA.
This doesn't mean a genetic test can predict your child's future.
This is where things get interesting
The study also showed something important about diversity. Some genetic signals acted differently in different ancestry groups. That's a reminder that research done only on European populations misses a lot.
Future studies that include everyone will be more accurate, and more fair.
How this fits the bigger picture
Experts have long known that addiction runs in families. But families share more than genes. They share stress, income, neighborhoods, and habits.
This study doesn't replace that understanding. It adds to it. Genes are one piece. Environment is another. The real power comes when scientists combine both.
Researchers hope that in the future, doctors might use a mix of DNA clues and life factors to spot teens who need extra support before they start using.
Right now, this research is still in the lab. You cannot get a DNA test that predicts when your teen might try drugs or alcohol.
What you can do is stay connected. Talk openly with your kids about substances. Pay attention to stress, friend groups, and mental health. These known risk factors still matter most.
If addiction runs in your family, tell your pediatrician. They can help with screening and prevention strategies that already work.
What the study can't tell us yet
This study is a starting point, not a finish line. The signals found were suggestive. Only one reached the strongest level of proof.
The ABCD sample, while large, is still limited. More teens from more backgrounds need to be studied. And genetics alone cannot capture the full story of why kids use substances.
Next, scientists will try to confirm these findings in larger groups. They'll also dig deeper into what these genes actually do in the brain and body.
Over time, this research could help shape smarter prevention programs. Ones that reach the right kids at the right age, long before a problem starts. That kind of tool is still years away, but studies like this one are how we get there.