The Impact of Childhood Mental Health and Substance Use on Methylation Aging Into Adulthood

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Abstract

Objective

To test whether childhood mental health symptoms, substance use, and early adversity accelerate the rate of DNA methylation (DNAm) aging from adolescence to adulthood.

Method

DNAm was assayed from blood samples in 381 participants in both adolescence (mean [SD] age = 13.9 [1.6] years) and adulthood (mean [SD] age = 25.9 [2.7] years). Structured diagnostic interviews were completed with participants and their parents at multiple childhood observations (1,950 total) to assess symptoms of common mental health disorders (attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder, oppositional defiant disorder, conduct disorder, anxiety, and depression) and common types of substance use (alcohol, cannabis, nicotine) and early adversities.

Results

Neither childhood mental health symptoms nor substance use variables were associated with DNAm aging cross-sectionally. In contrast, the following mental health symptoms and substance variables were associated with accelerated DNAm aging from adolescence to adulthood: depressive symptoms (b = 0.314, SE = 0.127, p = .014), internalizing symptoms (b = 0.108, SE = 0.049, p = .029), weekly cannabis use (b =1.665, SE = 0.591, p = .005), and years of weekly cannabis use (b = 0.718, SE = 0.283, p = .012). In models testing all individual variables simultaneously, the combined effect of the variables was equivalent to a potential difference of 3.17 to 3.76 years in DNAm aging. A final model tested a variable assessing cumulative exposure to mental health symptoms, substance use, and early adversities. This cumulative variable was strongly associated with accelerated aging (b = 0.126, SE = 0.044, p = .005).

Conclusion

Mental health symptoms and substance use accelerated DNAm aging into adulthood in a manner consistent with a shared risk mechanism.

Plain language summary

Using data from 381 participants in the Great Smoky Mountains Study, the authors examined whether childhood mental health symptoms, substance use, and early adversity accelerate biological aging, as measured by DNA methylation age, from adolescence to adulthood. Depressive symptoms and cannabis use were found to significantly accelerate biological aging. Models that tested the combined effect of mental health symptoms, substance use, and early adversity demonstrated that there was a shared effect across these types of childhood problems on accelerated aging.

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童年心理健康和药物使用对成年期甲基化的影响
方法 381 名参与者分别在青春期(平均年龄 13.9 岁;SD 1.6 岁)和成年期(平均年龄 25.9 岁;SD 2.7 岁)进行了血液 DNAm 检测。对参与者及其父母进行了多次儿童期观察(共 1,950 次),并完成了结构化诊断访谈,以评估常见心理健康障碍症状(多动症、注意力缺陷障碍、抑郁症、焦虑症和抑郁症)以及常见药物使用类型(酒精、大麻、尼古丁)和早期逆境。相反,以下心理健康症状和药物变量与 DNAm 从青春期到成年期的加速老化有关:抑郁症状(b [SE] = 0.314 [0.127],P = .014)、内化症状(b [SE] = 0.108 [0.049],P = .029)、每周使用大麻(b [SE] = 1.665 [0.591],P = .005)和每周使用大麻的年数(b [SE] = 0.718 [0.283],P = .012)。在同时测试所有单个变量的模型中,这些变量的综合效应相当于 DNAm 老化可能相差 3.17 至 3.76 年。最后一个模型测试了一个评估精神健康症状、药物使用和早期逆境累积暴露的变量。这一累积变量与加速衰老密切相关(b [SE] =0.126 [0.044],P = .005)。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
21.00
自引率
1.50%
发文量
1383
审稿时长
53 days
期刊介绍: The Journal of the American Academy of Child & Adolescent Psychiatry (JAACAP) is dedicated to advancing the field of child and adolescent psychiatry through the publication of original research and papers of theoretical, scientific, and clinical significance. Our primary focus is on the mental health of children, adolescents, and families. We welcome unpublished manuscripts that explore various perspectives, ranging from genetic, epidemiological, neurobiological, and psychopathological research, to cognitive, behavioral, psychodynamic, and other psychotherapeutic investigations. We also encourage submissions that delve into parent-child, interpersonal, and family research, as well as clinical and empirical studies conducted in inpatient, outpatient, consultation-liaison, and school-based settings. In addition to publishing research, we aim to promote the well-being of children and families by featuring scholarly papers on topics such as health policy, legislation, advocacy, culture, society, and service provision in relation to mental health. At JAACAP, we strive to foster collaboration and dialogue among researchers, clinicians, and policy-makers in order to enhance our understanding and approach to child and adolescent mental health.
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