O'Shields Jay D, Slavich George M, Mowbray Orion
Department of Social Work, University of Alabama at Birmingham, Birmingham, AL, USA.
Department of Psychiatry and Biobehavioral Sciences, University of California, Los Angeles, CA, USA.
Psychol Med. 2025 May 13;55:e140. doi: 10.1017/S0033291725001102.
Although adverse childhood experiences (ACEs) are commonly associated with depressive symptoms in adulthood, studies frequently collapse ACEs into a single unitary index, making it difficult to identify specific targets for intervention and prevention. Furthermore, studies rarely explore sex differences in this area despite males and females often differing in the experiences of ACEs, depressive symptoms, and inflammatory activity. To address these issues, we used data from the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent to Adult Health to model the effects of 10 different ACEs on C-reactive protein (CRP) and depressive symptoms in adulthood. Path modeling was used to measure the effects of ACEs on CRP and depressive symptoms conjointly while also assigning covariances among ACEs to assess their interrelations. Sex-by-ACE interaction terms and sex-disaggregated models were used to test for potential differences. Emotional abuse and parental incarceration were consistently related to both CRP and depressive symptoms for males and females. Childhood maltreatment was associated with depressive symptoms for females, whereas sexual abuse was associated with inflammation for males. Several covariances among ACEs were identified, indicating potential networks through which ACEs are indirectly associated with CRP and depressive symptoms. These data demonstrate that ACEs have differing direct effects on CRP and depressive symptoms - and that they differ with respect to how they cluster - for males versus females. These differences should be considered in theory and clinical workflows aiming to understand, treat, and prevent the long-term impacts of ACEs on depressive symptoms and inflammation-related health conditions in adulthood.
尽管童年不良经历(ACEs)通常与成年后的抑郁症状相关,但研究常常将ACEs合并为一个单一的综合指数,这使得难以确定干预和预防的具体目标。此外,尽管男性和女性在ACEs经历、抑郁症状和炎症活动方面往往存在差异,但该领域的研究很少探讨性别差异。为了解决这些问题,我们使用了青少年到成人健康全国纵向研究的数据,以模拟10种不同的ACEs对成年期C反应蛋白(CRP)和抑郁症状的影响。路径建模用于联合测量ACEs对CRP和抑郁症状的影响,同时还赋予ACEs之间的协方差以评估它们的相互关系。使用性别与ACEs交互项和按性别分类的模型来测试潜在差异。情感虐待和父母监禁与男性和女性的CRP和抑郁症状始终相关。童年虐待与女性的抑郁症状相关,而性虐待与男性的炎症相关。确定了ACEs之间的几个协方差,表明ACEs通过其间接与CRP和抑郁症状相关的潜在网络。这些数据表明,ACEs对CRP和抑郁症状有不同的直接影响,而且它们在男性和女性中的聚集方式也不同。在旨在理解、治疗和预防ACEs对成年期抑郁症状和炎症相关健康状况的长期影响的理论和临床工作流程中,应考虑这些差异。