Western Psychiatric Hospital, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, PA, USA.
New York State Psychiatric Institute, Columbia University, New York, NY, USA.
J Child Psychol Psychiatry. 2019 Oct;60(10):1085-1093. doi: 10.1111/jcpp.13096. Epub 2019 Jul 24.
Suicide is the second leading cause of death in young people. Childhood maltreatment, neuropsychological dysfunction and psychopathology have each been shown to increase risk for suicidal behavior. However, few studies have examined their interactions and the effects of those interactions on suicidal behavior.
Across two sites, a total of 382 offspring of depressed parents underwent neuropsychological assessments. This high-risk sample included nearly equal numbers of males and females. Average age at the time of neuropsychological assessment was 18.5 years. The most prevalent lifetime psychiatric disorders were mood (43%), anxiety (37%) and alcohol and substance use disorders (21%). Childhood maltreatment was reported by 44% of offspring. Participants underwent extensive neuropsychological testing assessing the following domains: attention, memory, executive function, working memory, language fluency, and impulse control. Logistic regression was used to examine the association of reported childhood maltreatment, neuropsychological functioning, psychopathology and their interactions with suicidal behavior. Bonferroni correction was used to adjust for multiple comparisons.
Maltreatment was associated with increased risk of suicidal behavior with odds ratios ranging between 2.40 and 4.43. Moderation analyses found that adaptive neuropsychological functioning was not protective against childhood maltreatment's effect on suicidal risk. While lifetime history of mood disorder was strongly associated with suicidal behavior, higher scores in working memory (OR = 0.21; 95% CI = 0.09, 0.45; p < .001) and executive function (OR = 0.15; 95% CI = 0.05, 0.43; p < .001) were protective against suicidal behavior even in the presence of a lifetime history of mood disorder.
Further research is needed to determine how neuropsychological capacity protects depressed patients against the risk of suicidal behavior.
自杀是年轻人的第二大死因。童年期虐待、神经心理功能障碍和精神病理学都被证明会增加自杀行为的风险。然而,很少有研究检查过它们的相互作用以及这些相互作用对自杀行为的影响。
在两个地点,共有 382 名抑郁父母的后代接受了神经心理学评估。这个高风险样本包括数量相当的男性和女性。神经心理学评估时的平均年龄为 18.5 岁。最常见的终生精神障碍是情绪障碍(43%)、焦虑症(37%)和酒精和物质使用障碍(21%)。44%的后代报告了童年期虐待。参与者接受了广泛的神经心理学测试,评估以下领域:注意力、记忆、执行功能、工作记忆、语言流畅性和冲动控制。逻辑回归用于检查报告的童年期虐待、神经心理功能、精神病理学及其与自杀行为的相互作用与自杀行为的关联。使用 Bonferroni 校正进行了多次比较的调整。
虐待与自杀行为的风险增加有关,比值比在 2.40 到 4.43 之间。调节分析发现,适应性神经心理功能并不能预防童年期虐待对自杀风险的影响。虽然心境障碍的终生病史与自杀行为密切相关,但工作记忆(OR=0.21;95%CI=0.09,0.45;p<0.001)和执行功能(OR=0.15;95%CI=0.05,0.43;p<0.001)的得分较高与即使存在心境障碍的终生病史,也能保护免受自杀行为的影响。
需要进一步研究,以确定神经心理能力如何保护抑郁患者免受自杀行为的风险。