Epperson C Neill, Sammel Mary D, Bale Tracy L, Kim Deborah R, Conlin Sarah, Scalice Stephanie, Freeman Katharine, Freeman Ellen W
Professor of Psychiatry and Obstetrics and Gynecology, Perelman School of Medicine, University of Pennsylvania, 3535 Market St, Rm 3001, Philadelphia, PA 19104.
Penn PROMOTES Research on Sex and Gender in Health, Perelman School of Medicine, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA.
J Clin Psychiatry. 2017 Mar;78(3):e298-e307. doi: 10.4088/JCP.16m10662.
Stress exposures may have a differential impact on risk and resilience for depression depending on their timing across development. We sought to determine whether adverse childhood experiences (ACEs) and their onset with respect to puberty contribute to the increased risk observed in first-episode major depressive disorder (MDD) during the menopause transition.
Participants were from the Penn Ovarian Aging Study cohort, which is composed of women from Philadelphia County, Pennsylvania, who underwent behavioral, cognitive, and endocrine evaluations approximately yearly from 1996 to 2012 and completed the Adverse Childhood Experiences Questionnaire at study end point (n = 243). ACEs that first occurred 2 or more years before menarche were considered prepubertal. Incident menopause MDD was defined as first observed onset of the disorder in the perimenopause to postmenopause transition using the Structured Clinical Interview for DSM-III-R and the Primary Care Evaluation of Mental Disorders.
Incident menopause MDD occurred in 48% of the 100 women who reported lifetime MDD. Women reporting ≥ 2 total ACEs were at significantly greater risk for lifetime MDD (adjusted odds ratio [aOR] = 2.05, P = .034) and incident menopause MDD (aOR = 2.58, P = .03) compared to those reporting 0 ACEs; women with ≥ 2 postpubertal ACEs were 2.3 times more likely to experience incidence menopause MDD (P = .024) after controlling for race, smoking, body mass index, and employment. Experiencing only 1 ACE in the prepubertal window, regardless of additional ACEs in postpuberty, was associated with reduced risk for lifetime and incident menopause MDD.
Timing and number of adverse experiences with respect to puberty differentially impacted risk and resilience for MDD across the female life span and during the menopause transition in this community cohort.
应激暴露对抑郁症风险和恢复力的影响可能因在整个发育过程中的时间不同而有所差异。我们试图确定童年不良经历(ACEs)及其在青春期的发病时间是否会导致在绝经过渡期间首次发作的重度抑郁症(MDD)风险增加。
参与者来自宾夕法尼亚卵巢衰老研究队列,该队列由宾夕法尼亚州费城县的女性组成,她们在1996年至2012年期间大约每年接受行为、认知和内分泌评估,并在研究终点完成童年不良经历问卷(n = 243)。初潮前2年或更早发生的ACEs被视为青春期前的经历。绝经期间发生的MDD被定义为使用《DSM-III-R结构临床访谈》和《精神障碍初级保健评估》在围绝经期至绝经后过渡期间首次观察到的该疾病发作。
在报告有终生MDD的100名女性中,48%发生了绝经期间的MDD。与报告0次ACEs的女性相比,报告≥2次ACEs的女性患终生MDD(调整后的优势比[aOR]=2.05,P = 0.034)和绝经期间发生的MDD(aOR = 2.58,P = 0.03)的风险显著更高;在控制了种族、吸烟、体重指数和就业情况后,青春期后有≥2次ACEs的女性发生绝经期间MDD的可能性是其他人的2.3倍(P = 0.024)。在青春期前阶段仅经历1次ACEs,无论青春期后是否有其他ACEs,都与终生和绝经期间发生的MDD风险降低有关。
在这个社区队列中,青春期不良经历的时间和数量对女性一生中以及绝经过渡期间MDD的风险和恢复力有不同的影响。