Centre for Academic Mental Health, Population Health Sciences, Bristol Medical School, University of Bristol, Bristol, United Kingdom.
Cardiff University Brain Research Imaging Centre, School of Psychology, University of Cardiff, Cardiff, United Kingdom.
JAMA Psychiatry. 2019 Jan 1;76(1):79-86. doi: 10.1001/jamapsychiatry.2018.3155.
Cross-sectional and longitudinal studies have consistently reported associations between childhood trauma and psychotic experiences and disorders. However, few studies have examined whether the age of exposure or specific trauma types are differently associated with the risk of developing psychotic experiences.
To examine whether exposure to trauma, assessed at multiple age periods between 0 and 17 years of age, is associated with an increased risk of psychotic experiences by age 18 years and whether this association varies according to trauma type as well as age and frequency of exposure.
DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS: This study used data from the Avon Longitudinal Study of Parents and Children, a large population-based birth cohort in the United Kingdom that recruited women who resided in the Avon Health Authority area and had an expected delivery date between April 1, 1991, and December 31, 1992. Data on psychotic experiences were included in the study, along with trauma variables derived from assessments completed by the parents or self-reported by the participants. The variables represent exposure to any trauma type between ages 0 and 17 years; any trauma type within a distinct age period: early childhood (0-4.9 years), middle childhood (5-10.9 years), or adolescence (11-17 years); specific trauma types between ages 0 and 17 years; and specific trauma types within early childhood, middle childhood, or adolescence. Data were analyzed from January 9, 2017, to November 30, 2017.
Suspected or definite psychotic experiences were assessed using the psychosis-like symptoms semistructured interview at age 12 years and then at age 18 years.
The sample of 4433 participants included 2504 (56.5%) females, with a mean (SD) age of 17.8 (0.38) years. Exposure to any trauma up to age 17 years was associated with increased odds of psychotic experiences at age 18 years (adjusted odds ratio, 2.91; 95% CI, 2.15-3.93). All trauma types from age 0 to 17 years were associated with an increased odds of psychotic experiences. The population-attributable fraction for childhood and adolescent trauma on psychotic experiences at age 18 years was 45% (95% CI, 25%-60%). Effect sizes for most trauma types were greater for exposure that was more proximal to the outcome, although CIs overlapped with those for more distal trauma. Evidence supported dose-response associations for exposure to multiple trauma types and at multiple age periods. In an analysis aimed at minimizing reverse causality, adolescent trauma was also associated with past-year incident psychotic experiences at age 18 years.
These findings are consistent with the thesis that trauma could have a causal association with psychotic experiences; if so, identification of modifiable mediators is required to inform prevention strategies.
横断面和纵向研究一致报告了儿童创伤与精神病体验和障碍之间的关联。然而,很少有研究检查暴露年龄或特定创伤类型是否与发展精神病体验的风险有不同的关联。
研究在 0 至 17 岁之间的多个年龄段评估的创伤暴露是否与 18 岁时精神病体验的风险增加有关,以及这种关联是否因创伤类型以及暴露的年龄和频率而异。
设计、地点和参与者:这项研究使用了来自英国阿冯纵向研究父母和儿童的数据,这是一项大型基于人群的出生队列研究,招募了居住在阿冯卫生局地区并预计在 1991 年 4 月 1 日至 1992 年 12 月 31 日之间分娩的女性。研究包括精神病体验数据,以及由父母完成或参与者自我报告的创伤变量。这些变量代表了 0 至 17 岁之间任何创伤类型的暴露;特定年龄期内的任何创伤类型:幼儿期(0-4.9 岁)、儿童中期(5-10.9 岁)或青春期(11-17 岁);0 至 17 岁之间的特定创伤类型;以及幼儿期、儿童中期或青春期内的特定创伤类型。数据分析于 2017 年 1 月 9 日至 2017 年 11 月 30 日进行。
在 12 岁和 18 岁时使用精神病样症状半结构化访谈评估可疑或明确的精神病体验。
在 4433 名参与者中,有 2504 名(56.5%)女性,平均(SD)年龄为 17.8(0.38)岁。在 17 岁之前接触任何创伤都与 18 岁时精神病体验的几率增加有关(调整后的优势比,2.91;95%置信区间,2.15-3.93)。0 至 17 岁的所有创伤类型都与精神病体验几率增加有关。儿童和青少年创伤对 18 岁时精神病体验的人群归因分数为 45%(95%置信区间,25%-60%)。尽管置信区间与更远距离的创伤重叠,但大多数创伤类型的效应大小对于更接近结局的暴露更大。有证据支持多次创伤暴露和多个年龄段暴露的剂量反应关系。在一项旨在最小化反向因果关系的分析中,青春期创伤也与 18 岁时过去一年的偶发性精神病体验有关。
这些发现与创伤可能与精神病体验有因果关系的论点一致;如果是这样,就需要确定可改变的中介因素,以告知预防策略。