Ratzsch Janette, Richter Maike, Blitz Rogério, Colic Lejla, Gutfleisch Lara, Goltermann Janik, Gruber Marius, Straube Benjamin, Alexander Nina, Jamalabadi Hamidreza, Stein Frederike, Brosch Katharina, Thomas-Odenthal Florian, Usemann Paula, Teutenberg Lea, Repple Jonathan, Baune Bernhard T, Walter Martin, Nenadić Igor, Kircher Tilo, Dannlowski Udo, Opel Nils
Department of Psychiatry and Psychotherapy, Jena University Hospital, Jena, Germany.
Center for Intervention and Research on Adaptive and Maladaptive Brain Circuits Underlying Mental Health (C-I-R-C), Jena-Magdeburg-Halle, Germany.
Psychol Med. 2025 May 2;55:e127. doi: 10.1017/S0033291725000984.
Many studies have highlighted the detrimental effect of childhood maltreatment (CM) on depression severity and the course of illness in major depressive disorder (MDD). Yet our understanding of how CM influences the dynamic symptom change throughout a patient's trajectory remains limited. Hence, we investigated the impact of CM on depression severity in MDD with a focus on various treatment phases during inpatient treatment and after discharge (1 or 2 years later) and validated findings in a real-world setting.
We used longitudinal data from a cohort study sample ( = 567) and a clinical routine sample ( = 438). CM was measured with the Childhood Trauma Questionnaire (CTQ), and depression severity was assessed using Beck's Depression Inventory (BDI). The long-term clinical trajectory was assessed using the Life Chart Interview.
Our analyses revealed that CM significantly increased depression severity before, during, and after inpatient therapy in both samples. Although CM was associated with higher depression severity at the beginning of inpatient treatment and lower remission rates upon discharge, no discernible impact of CM was evident on the relative change in symptoms over time during inpatient treatment. CM consistently predicted higher relapse rates and lower rates of full remission after discharge during long-term follow-up in both samples.
Our findings affirm the link between CM and the development of more severe and persistent clinical trajectories within real-world clinical settings. Furthermore, conventional psychiatric treatments may not lead to comparable outcomes for individuals with a history of CM, underscoring the necessity for tailored therapeutic interventions.
许多研究强调了童年期虐待(CM)对重度抑郁症(MDD)的抑郁严重程度和病程的有害影响。然而,我们对CM如何影响患者整个病程中症状的动态变化的理解仍然有限。因此,我们研究了CM对MDD抑郁严重程度的影响,重点关注住院治疗期间及出院后(1或2年后)的各个治疗阶段,并在现实环境中验证了研究结果。
我们使用了队列研究样本(n = 567)和临床常规样本(n = 438)的纵向数据。使用儿童创伤问卷(CTQ)测量CM,使用贝克抑郁量表(BDI)评估抑郁严重程度。使用生活图表访谈评估长期临床病程。
我们的分析显示,在两个样本中,CM在住院治疗前、期间和之后均显著增加了抑郁严重程度。虽然CM与住院治疗开始时较高的抑郁严重程度以及出院时较低的缓解率相关,但在住院治疗期间,CM对症状随时间的相对变化没有明显影响。在两个样本的长期随访中,CM始终预测出院后较高的复发率和较低的完全缓解率。
我们的研究结果证实了在现实临床环境中CM与更严重和持续的临床病程发展之间的联系。此外,传统的精神科治疗可能无法为有CM病史的个体带来可比的结果,这凸显了量身定制治疗干预措施的必要性。