Department of Psychiatry, McGill University, Québec, Canada
Douglas Mental Health University Institute, Québec, Canada.
Diabetes Care. 2018 Oct;41(10):2120-2126. doi: 10.2337/dc18-0932. Epub 2018 Aug 2.
Adverse childhood experiences (ACEs) are associated with an increased risk of diabetes in adulthood. However, the potential mediating roles of depression and cardiometabolic dysregulations in this association are not clear.
Prospective data were from the Whitehall II cohort study, with the phase 5 assessment (1997-1999) serving as baseline ( = 5,093, age range = 44-68 years, 27.3% female). ACEs were retrospectively reported at phase 5. Depressive symptoms (Center for Epidemiologic Studies Depression Scale) and cardiometabolic dysregulations (inflammation, central obesity, HDL cholesterol, triglycerides, impaired fasting glucose, and hypertension) were examined at phase 7 (2002-2004). Incident diabetes was examined at phases 8-11 (2006-2013) via self-report and blood samples. Participants reporting diabetes prior to phase 8 were excluded. Statistical mediation was examined with path analysis using structural equation modeling. ACEs were modeled as an observed continuous variable, whereas depressive symptoms and cardiometabolic dysregulations were modeled as latent variables. Unstandardized probit regression coefficients with 95% CI are reported for mediation analysis.
ACEs were associated with an increased likelihood of diabetes, with every addition of ACE associated with an ∼11% increase in odds of diabetes (odds ratio 1.11 [95% CI 1.00, 1.24], = 0.048). In mediation analysis, ACEs were indirectly associated with diabetes via depressive symptoms (indirect effect 0.03 [95% CI 0.02, 0.04], < 0.001) and cardiometabolic dysregulations (indirect effect 0.03 [95% CI 0.01, 0.05], = 0.03).
This study provides further evidence of the detrimental psychological and physiological effects of ACEs and suggests that depression and cardiometabolic dysregulations may be pathways linking ACEs with diabetes in adulthood.
不良的童年经历(ACEs)与成年人患糖尿病的风险增加有关。然而,这种关联中抑郁和心脏代谢失调的潜在中介作用尚不清楚。
前瞻性数据来自白厅 II 队列研究,第 5 阶段评估(1997-1999 年)作为基线(=5093,年龄范围为 44-68 岁,女性占 27.3%)。ACEs 在第 5 阶段进行回顾性报告。抑郁症状(流行病学研究中心抑郁量表)和心脏代谢失调(炎症、中心性肥胖、高密度脂蛋白胆固醇、甘油三酯、空腹血糖受损和高血压)在第 7 阶段(2002-2004 年)进行检查。通过自我报告和血液样本在第 8-11 阶段(2006-2013 年)检查新发糖尿病。排除在第 8 阶段之前报告患有糖尿病的参与者。使用结构方程模型的路径分析进行统计中介分析。ACEs 被建模为一个观察到的连续变量,而抑郁症状和心脏代谢失调被建模为潜在变量。报告未标准化概率回归系数及其 95%置信区间用于中介分析。
ACEs 与糖尿病的发生几率增加有关,每增加一个 ACE 与糖尿病发生几率增加约 11%(比值比 1.11 [95%置信区间 1.00,1.24],=0.048)。在中介分析中,ACEs 通过抑郁症状(间接效应 0.03 [95%置信区间 0.02,0.04],<0.001)和心脏代谢失调(间接效应 0.03 [95%置信区间 0.01,0.05],=0.03)与糖尿病间接相关。
本研究进一步证明了 ACEs 的不良心理和生理影响,并表明抑郁和心脏代谢失调可能是 ACEs 与成年人糖尿病之间的联系途径。