Zhou Wenhui, Wei Jianye, Wang Shuning, Xu Xiaoqian, Zhao Jia, Miao Jixing, Shao Jinang, Zhou Jin, Ning Ning, Liu Qitong, Huang Rong, He Lixia, Ma Yanan
Key Laboratory of Environmental Stress and Chronic Disease Control & Prevention, Ministry of Education, China Medical University, No.77 Puhe Road, Shenyang, Liaoning Province 110122, China; Department of Biostatistics and Epidemiology, School of Public Health, China Medical University, No. 77 Puhe Road, Shenyang, Liaoning Province 110122, China.
Clinical Medicine, The First Clinical Medical School, China Medical University, Shenyang 110001, China.
Child Abuse Negl. 2025 Jun 17;167:107569. doi: 10.1016/j.chiabu.2025.107569.
Adverse childhood experiences (ACEs) and obesity are independently linked to multimorbidity. Emerging evidence suggests that ACEs may exacerbate obesity-related metabolic dysregulation through biological and behavioral pathways. The joint effect of ACEs and obesity on developing multimorbidity remains underexplored.
To examine how ACEs and obesity contribute to the risk of multimorbidity and evaluate whether socioeconomic or lifestyle factors influence these relationships.
Multimorbidity was defined as the presence of two or more self-reported physician diagnoses of 14 chronic diseases. ACEs were measured by participants' retrospective records whether exposure to 14 distinct ACE types: physical abuse, parental bias, emotional neglect, household substance abuse, parental mental illness, family conflict, parental imprisonment, parental divorce, parental death, sibling death, parental long-term disability/illness, family financial difficulty, bullying, and unsafe and dirty neighborhood exposure that were characterized by the binarized presence or absence of any ACE. While adapted thresholds defined overweight and obesity: overweight (24 kg/ m ≤ BMI < 28 kg/m) and obesity (BMI ≥ 28 kg/m). We estimated the association between ACEs (including types and dose exposure), obesity, and multimorbidity using logistic regression and the Cox regression model while further evaluating their combined effects.
Individuals with ≥4 ACEs faced a 50 % higher risk of multimorbidity compared to those without ACEs, showing a dose-response trend. Obesity independently increased multimorbidity risk by 71 %. Combined exposure to high ACEs and obesity nearly doubled the risk.
ACEs and overweight/obesity represent critical risk factors for multimorbidity among the elderly. This study underscores the need for: greater exploration of life-course perspectives in multimorbidity research, enhanced public health focus on ACE prevention, and improved access to weight-management programs. Our findings help identify potential risk factors for multimorbidity.
童年不良经历(ACEs)和肥胖均与多种疾病独立相关。新出现的证据表明,ACEs可能通过生物学和行为途径加剧与肥胖相关的代谢失调。ACEs和肥胖对发生多种疾病的联合影响仍未得到充分研究。
研究ACEs和肥胖如何导致发生多种疾病的风险,并评估社会经济或生活方式因素是否会影响这些关系。
多种疾病定义为自我报告有医生诊断的14种慢性病中的两种或更多种。ACEs通过参与者对是否接触14种不同类型ACEs的回顾性记录来衡量:身体虐待、父母偏袒、情感忽视、家庭药物滥用、父母精神疾病、家庭冲突、父母监禁、父母离异、父母死亡、兄弟姐妹死亡、父母长期残疾/疾病、家庭经济困难、欺凌以及不安全和肮脏的邻里环境暴露,这些均以是否存在任何一种ACEs进行二元化表征。同时采用调整后的阈值定义超重和肥胖:超重(24kg/m≤体重指数<28kg/m)和肥胖(体重指数≥28kg/m)。我们使用逻辑回归和Cox回归模型估计ACEs(包括类型和剂量暴露)、肥胖与多种疾病之间的关联,同时进一步评估它们的联合效应。
与没有ACEs的个体相比,有≥4种ACEs的个体发生多种疾病的风险高出50%,呈现剂量反应趋势。肥胖使发生多种疾病的风险独立增加71%。ACEs高暴露与肥胖共同作用使风险几乎加倍。
ACEs和超重/肥胖是老年人发生多种疾病的关键风险因素。本研究强调需要:在多种疾病研究中更多地探索生命历程观点,加强公共卫生对ACE预防的关注,以及改善体重管理项目的可及性。我们的研究结果有助于识别发生多种疾病的潜在风险因素。