Underwood Jack F G, Madley-Dowd Paul, Dardani Christina, Hull Laura, Kwong Alex S F, Pearson Rebecca M, Hall Jeremy, Rai Dheeraj
Neuroscience and Mental Health Innovation Institute, Cardiff University, United Kingdom.
Population Health Sciences, Bristol Medical School, University of Bristol, United Kingdom.
medRxiv. 2024 Jul 12:2024.07.12.24310340. doi: 10.1101/2024.07.12.24310340.
Autism and autistic traits have been associated with greater risk of childhood trauma and adulthood psychopathology. However, the role that childhood trauma plays in the association between autism, autistic traits and depression in adulthood is poorly understood.
We used a UK-based birth cohort with phenotype and genotype data on autism, autistic traits, childhood trauma and depression in up to 9,659 individuals prospectively followed up from birth until age 28 years. Using mixed-effects growth-curve models, we assessed trajectories of depression symptoms over time according to the presence or absence of autism/ autistic traits and explored whether these differed by trauma exposure. We further investigated the association between autism/ autistic traits and depression in adulthood using confounder-adjusted logistic regression models and undertook mediation analyses to investigate the relationship with childhood trauma.
All autism variables demonstrated increased depressive symptom trajectories between ages 10-28 years. Social communication difficulties (SCDs) were the most strongly associated with a depression diagnosis in adulthood (age 24 OR= 2.15; 95%CIs: 1.22-3.76). Trauma and autistic traits combined to further increase depression symptom scores. Mediation analyses provided evidence for direct pathways between autistic traits and increased risk of depression alongside indirect pathways through increased risk of trauma.
Autism/ autistic traits increase the odds of experiencing childhood trauma and of being diagnosed with depression at age 18 and 24. Depressive symptom trajectories emergent in childhood persist into adulthood. The combined effect of SCDs and childhood trauma is greater than the individual exposures, suggesting worse depression symptomatology following trauma in individuals with SCDs.
自闭症及自闭症特质与儿童期创伤和成年期精神病理学的更高风险相关。然而,儿童期创伤在自闭症、自闭症特质与成年期抑郁症之间的关联中所起的作用尚不清楚。
我们使用了一个基于英国的出生队列,该队列有多达9659人的自闭症、自闭症特质、儿童期创伤和抑郁症的表型及基因型数据,从出生一直随访至28岁。我们使用混合效应生长曲线模型,根据是否存在自闭症/自闭症特质评估随时间变化的抑郁症状轨迹,并探讨这些轨迹是否因创伤暴露而有所不同。我们进一步使用经混杂因素调整的逻辑回归模型研究自闭症/自闭症特质与成年期抑郁症之间的关联,并进行中介分析以研究与儿童期创伤的关系。
所有自闭症变量均显示在10 - 28岁之间抑郁症状轨迹增加。社交沟通困难(SCDs)与成年期(24岁)的抑郁症诊断关联最为密切(OR = 2.15;95%置信区间:1.22 - 3.76)。创伤和自闭症特质共同作用进一步增加了抑郁症状评分。中介分析为自闭症特质与抑郁症风险增加之间的直接路径以及通过创伤风险增加的间接路径提供了证据。
自闭症/自闭症特质增加了儿童期遭受创伤以及在18岁和24岁时被诊断为抑郁症的几率。儿童期出现的抑郁症状轨迹持续至成年期。SCDs和儿童期创伤的联合作用大于个体暴露的影响,这表明SCDs个体在遭受创伤后抑郁症状更严重。