Gayathri J Dowling, Elizabeth A Hoffman, Katherine M Cole, Eric M Wargo, Nora Volkow
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Until recently, a scarcity of comprehensive studies has limited a full understanding of the complexity of factors that may affect neurodevelopment, including substance exposure in pregnancy and/or subsequent substance use in adolescence, alongside their dynamic interactions with environmental factors and genetics. Two large longitudinal cohort studies funded by National Institutes of Health-the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD) Study and the HEALthy Brain and Child Development (HBCD) Study-are collecting data on neurodevelopment and a wide range of environmental and biological factors across the first two decades of life to build databases that will allow researchers to study how individual neurodevelopmental trajectories are influenced by drugs, adverse childhood experiences, and genetics, among other factors. These studies are already deepening the understanding of risk and resilience factors that prevention programs could target and will identify critical windows where interventions can have the most impact on an individual's neurodevelopmental trajectory. This article describes what is being learned from ABCD and expected from HBCD and how these studies might inform prevention as these children grow and more data are gathered.</p>","PeriodicalId":73036,"journal":{"name":"Focus (American Psychiatric Publishing)","volume":"22 4","pages":"449-457"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2024-10-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11571182/pdf/","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"The ABCD and HBCD Studies: Longitudinal Studies to Inform Prevention Science.\",\"authors\":\"Gayathri J Dowling, Elizabeth A Hoffman, Katherine M Cole, Eric M Wargo, Nora Volkow\",\"doi\":\"10.1176/appi.focus.20240016\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"<p><p>Increasing rates of overdose among U.S. adolescents and young adults, along with rising rates of emotional distress in these groups, are renewing the urgency for developmentally targeted and personalized substance use and other mental health prevention interventions. Most prevention programs recognize the unique vulnerability of childhood and adolescence and target parents and youths, addressing modifiable environmental risk and protective factors that affect behavior during periods when the brain is most susceptible to change. Until recently, a scarcity of comprehensive studies has limited a full understanding of the complexity of factors that may affect neurodevelopment, including substance exposure in pregnancy and/or subsequent substance use in adolescence, alongside their dynamic interactions with environmental factors and genetics. Two large longitudinal cohort studies funded by National Institutes of Health-the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD) Study and the HEALthy Brain and Child Development (HBCD) Study-are collecting data on neurodevelopment and a wide range of environmental and biological factors across the first two decades of life to build databases that will allow researchers to study how individual neurodevelopmental trajectories are influenced by drugs, adverse childhood experiences, and genetics, among other factors. These studies are already deepening the understanding of risk and resilience factors that prevention programs could target and will identify critical windows where interventions can have the most impact on an individual's neurodevelopmental trajectory. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
美国青少年和年轻成年人用药过量的比例不断上升,同时这些群体的情绪困扰率也在不断上升,这使得针对发展的、个性化的药物使用和其他心理健康预防干预措施变得更加迫切。大多数预防计划都认识到了儿童和青少年时期的独特脆弱性,并以父母和青少年为目标,解决在大脑最容易发生变化的时期影响行为的可改变的环境风险和保护因素。直到最近,由于缺乏全面的研究,人们对可能影响神经发育的各种因素的复杂性,包括孕期的药物暴露和/或青少年期的药物使用,以及这些因素与环境因素和遗传学之间的动态相互作用的全面了解还很有限。由美国国立卫生研究院(National Institutes of Health)资助的两项大型纵向队列研究--青少年大脑认知发展(ABCD)研究和健康大脑与儿童发展(HBCD)研究--正在收集生命最初二十年中神经发育和各种环境与生物因素的数据,以建立数据库,使研究人员能够研究个体神经发育轨迹如何受到药物、不良童年经历和遗传等因素的影响。这些研究已经加深了人们对预防计划所针对的风险和恢复力因素的理解,并将确定干预措施能对个体神经发育轨迹产生最大影响的关键窗口。本文介绍了从 ABCD 和预期从 HBCD 中了解到的情况,以及随着这些儿童的成长和更多数据的收集,这些研究将如何为预防工作提供信息。
The ABCD and HBCD Studies: Longitudinal Studies to Inform Prevention Science.
Increasing rates of overdose among U.S. adolescents and young adults, along with rising rates of emotional distress in these groups, are renewing the urgency for developmentally targeted and personalized substance use and other mental health prevention interventions. Most prevention programs recognize the unique vulnerability of childhood and adolescence and target parents and youths, addressing modifiable environmental risk and protective factors that affect behavior during periods when the brain is most susceptible to change. Until recently, a scarcity of comprehensive studies has limited a full understanding of the complexity of factors that may affect neurodevelopment, including substance exposure in pregnancy and/or subsequent substance use in adolescence, alongside their dynamic interactions with environmental factors and genetics. Two large longitudinal cohort studies funded by National Institutes of Health-the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD) Study and the HEALthy Brain and Child Development (HBCD) Study-are collecting data on neurodevelopment and a wide range of environmental and biological factors across the first two decades of life to build databases that will allow researchers to study how individual neurodevelopmental trajectories are influenced by drugs, adverse childhood experiences, and genetics, among other factors. These studies are already deepening the understanding of risk and resilience factors that prevention programs could target and will identify critical windows where interventions can have the most impact on an individual's neurodevelopmental trajectory. This article describes what is being learned from ABCD and expected from HBCD and how these studies might inform prevention as these children grow and more data are gathered.