Konkolÿ Thege Barna, Horwood Lewis, Slater Linda, Tan Maria C, Hodgins David C, Wild T Cameron
Department of Psychology, University of Calgary, 2500 University Drive, Calgary, T2N 1N4, Canada.
Research and Academics Division, Waypoint Centre for Mental Health Care, 500 Church Street, Penetanguishene, ON, L9M 1G3, Canada.
BMC Psychiatry. 2017 May 4;17(1):164. doi: 10.1186/s12888-017-1323-1.
The aim of this study was to systematically summarize knowledge on the association between exposure to interpersonal trauma and addictive behaviors. Extant reviews on this association focused on a restricted range of substance-related addictions, and/or used a narrative instead of a systematic approach.
Systematic searches of 8 databases yielded 29,841 studies, of which 3054 studies were included and subsequently classified in relation to study design (scoping review). A subset of observational studies (N = 181) prospectively investigating the relationship between exposure to interpersonal traumata and subsequent behavioral or substance-related addiction problems were characterized. Heterogeneity in study methodologies and types of addictive behaviors and traumatic experiences assessed precluded meta-analysis. Instead, the proportions of associations tested in this literature that revealed positive, negative, or null relationships between trauma exposure and subsequent addictive behaviors were recorded, along with other methodological features.
Of 3054 included studies, 70.7% (n = 2160) used a cross-sectional design. In the 181 prospective observational studies (407,041 participants, 98.8% recruited from developed countries), 35.1% of the tested associations between trauma exposure and later addictive behaviors was positive, 1.3% was negative, and 63.6% was non-significant. These results were primarily obtained among non-treatment seeking samples (80.7% of studies; n = 146), using single and multi-item measures of addictive behaviors of unknown psychometric quality (46.4% of studies). Positive associations were more frequently observed in studies examining childhood versus adult traumatization (39.7% vs. 29.7%).
Longitudinal research in this area emphasizes alcohol abuse, and almost no research has examined behavioral addictions. Results provide some support for a positive association between exposure to interpersonal trauma and subsequent addictive behaviors but this relationship was not consistently reported. Longitudinal studies typically assessed trauma exposure retrospectively, often after addictive behavior onset, thus precluding robust inferences about whether traumatization affects initial onset of addictive behaviors.
本研究旨在系统总结人际创伤暴露与成瘾行为之间关联的相关知识。关于这种关联的现有综述聚焦于有限范围的物质相关成瘾,和/或采用叙述性而非系统性方法。
对8个数据库进行系统检索得到29841项研究,其中3054项研究被纳入并随后根据研究设计进行分类(范围综述)。对一组前瞻性调查人际创伤暴露与随后行为或物质相关成瘾问题之间关系的观察性研究(N = 181)进行了特征描述。研究方法、成瘾行为类型和所评估的创伤经历的异质性使得无法进行荟萃分析。相反,记录了该文献中测试的创伤暴露与随后成瘾行为之间呈现正相关、负相关或无关联关系的关联比例,以及其他方法学特征。
在3054项纳入研究中,70.7%(n = 2160)采用横断面设计。在181项前瞻性观察性研究(407041名参与者,98.8%来自发达国家)中,创伤暴露与后期成瘾行为之间测试的关联中,35.1%为正相关,1.3%为负相关,63.6%无显著关联。这些结果主要在非寻求治疗样本中获得(80.7%的研究;n = 146),使用了心理测量质量未知的成瘾行为单项和多项测量方法(46.4%的研究)。在研究儿童期与成年期创伤时,正相关更常被观察到(39.7%对29.7%)。
该领域的纵向研究强调酒精滥用,几乎没有研究考察行为成瘾。结果为人际创伤暴露与随后成瘾行为之间的正相关提供了一些支持,但这种关系并未得到一致报道。纵向研究通常回顾性评估创伤暴露,往往在成瘾行为发作后,因此无法就创伤是否影响成瘾行为的初始发作进行有力推断。