Department of Clinical Psychology, Norwich Medical School, University of East Anglia, Norwich, UK.
Norfolk Community Health and Care, Norwich, UK.
Psychol Med. 2023 Apr;53(6):2585-2595. doi: 10.1017/S0033291721004505. Epub 2021 Nov 15.
Adverse childhood experiences (ACEs) increase the risk of mental health difficulties in general, but the link to panic disorder (PD) has received comparatively little attention. There are no data for the magnitudes between ACEs and PD. This systematic review and meta-analysis estimated the overall, as well as the subgroups, odds ratio of having PD in adults who report ACEs, compared to adults who do not.
The study was pre-registered on PROSPERO [CRD42018111506] and the database was searched in June 2021. In order to overcome the violation of independent assumptions due to multiple estimations from the same samples, we utilized a robust variance estimation model that supports meta-analysis for clustered estimations. Accordingly, an advanced method relaxing the distributional and asymptotic assumptions was used to assess publication bias and sensitivity.
The literature search and screening returned 34 final studies, comprising 192,182 participants. Ninety-six estimations of 20 types of ACEs were extracted. Pooled ORs are: overall 2.2, CI (1.82-2.58), sexual abuse 1.92, CI (1.37-2.46), physical abuse 1.71, CI (1.37-2.05), emotional abuse 1.61, CI (0.868-2.35), emotional neglect 1.53, CI (0.756-2.31), parental alcoholism 1.83, CI (1.24-2.43), and parental separation/loss 1.82, CI (1.14-2.50). No between-group difference was identified by either sociolegal classification (abuse, neglect, household dysfunction) or threat-deprivation dimensions (high on threat, high on deprivation and mixed).
There are links of mild to medium strength between overall ACEs and PD as well as individual ACEs. The homogeneous effect sizes across ACEs either suggest the effects of ACEs on PD are comparable, or raised the question whether the categorical or dimensional approaches to classifying ACEs are the definitive ways to conceptualize the impact of ACEs on later mental health.
不良的童年经历(ACEs)会增加一般心理健康问题的风险,但与惊恐障碍(PD)的关联却相对较少受到关注。目前尚无 ACEs 与 PD 之间的关联程度的数据。本系统评价和荟萃分析估计了报告 ACEs 的成年人与没有报告 ACEs 的成年人相比,患有 PD 的总体和亚组比值比。
该研究在 PROSPERO 上进行了预先注册[CRD42018111506],并于 2021 年 6 月在数据库中进行了搜索。为了克服由于从同一样本中多次估计而违反独立假设的问题,我们使用了一种稳健的方差估计模型,该模型支持对聚类估计进行荟萃分析。因此,使用一种放宽分布和渐近假设的高级方法来评估发表偏倚和敏感性。
文献搜索和筛选共返回 34 项最终研究,包含 192182 名参与者。共提取了 20 种 ACEs 的 96 项估计值。合并的 OR 为:总体 2.2,CI(1.82-2.58),性虐待 1.92,CI(1.37-2.46),身体虐待 1.71,CI(1.37-2.05),情感虐待 1.61,CI(0.868-2.35),情感忽视 1.53,CI(0.756-2.31),父母酗酒 1.83,CI(1.24-2.43),父母离异/丧失 1.82,CI(1.14-2.50)。无论是按照社会法律分类(虐待、忽视、家庭功能障碍)还是威胁剥夺维度(高威胁、高剥夺和混合)进行分组,都没有发现组间差异。
总体 ACEs 与 PD 以及个别 ACEs 之间存在轻度至中度的关联。ACEs 之间同质的效应大小表明 ACEs 对 PD 的影响相当,或者提出了 ACEs 分类的类别或维度方法是否是 ACEs 对后期心理健康影响的明确概念化方式的问题。