| Literature DB >> 26058452 |
Lars O White1, Annette M Klein2, Clemens Kirschbaum3, Maria Kurz-Adam4, Manfred Uhr5, Bertram Müller-Myhsok6,7,8, Katrin Hoffmann9, Susan Sierau10, Andrea Michel11, Tobias Stalder12, Jenny Horlich13, Jan Keil14, Anna Andreas15, Leonhard Resch16, Martin J Binser17, Anna Costa18, Elena Giourges19, Eva Neudecker20, Christiane Wolf21, Sandra Scheuer22, Marcus Ising23, Kai von Klitzing24.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Effective interventions for maltreated children are impeded by gaps in our knowledge of the etiopathogenic mechanisms leading from maltreatment to mental disorders. Although some studies have already identified individual risk factors, there is a lack of large-scale multilevel research on how psychosocial, neurobiological, and genetic factors act in concert to modulate risk of internalizing psychopathology in childhood following maltreatment. To help close this gap, we aim to delineate gender-specific pathways from maltreatment to psychological disorder/resilience. To this end, we examine the interplay of specific maltreatment characteristics and psychological, endocrine, metabolomic, and (epi-)genomic stress response patterns as well as cognitive-emotional/social processes as determinants of developmental outcome. Specifically, we will explore endocrine, metabolomic, and epigenetic mechanisms leading from maltreatment to a higher risk of depression and anxiety disorders. METHODS/Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26058452 PMCID: PMC4460761 DOI: 10.1186/s12888-015-0512-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Psychiatry ISSN: 1471-244X Impact factor: 3.630
Assessment of trauma/maltreatment, psychopathology, psychosocial factors, and physical development
| Variables | Measures | Source | Informants | Age groups | Samples | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| 4-8 | 9-14 | ||||
|
| ● MCS | Official documents | CPS file | x | x | 3,4 |
| ● CTS-PC | Interviews | Caregiver | x | x | 1-4 | |
| ● MNBS | Questionnaires | Caregiver, Child | x | 1-4 | ||
| Interviews (Picture-based) | Child | x | 1-4 | |||
|
| ||||||
|
| ● CBCL | Questionnaire | Caregiver | x | x | 1-4 |
|
| ● SDQ | Questionnaire | Caregiver, Child, | x | x | 1-4 |
| Teacher | x | x | 1-4 | |||
| ● YSR | Questionnaire | Child | x | 2-4 | ||
| ● BPI | Puppet Interviews | Child | x | 1, 3, 4 | ||
|
| ● CES-DC | Questionnaire | Caregiver, Child | x | x | 1-4 |
|
| ● SCARED | Questionnaire | Caregiver, Child | x | x | 1-4 |
| ● CHILD-S | Questionnaire | Caregiver | x | x | 2-4 | |
| ● ETI-CA | Questionnaire | Caregiver, Child | x | x | 1-4 | |
|
| ● K-SADS-PL | Interview | Caregiver | x | x | 2a, 3, 4 |
|
| ● PAPA | Interview | Caregiver | x | x | 1a,3 |
|
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|
| ● ASSIS | Interview | Child, Parent | x | x | 1-4 |
|
| ● PVS | Questionnaire | Child, Teacher | x | x | 1-4 |
|
| ● FES | Questionnaire | Caregiver | x | x | 1-4 |
| ● CTQ | Questionnaire | Caregiver | x | x | 1-4 | |
| ● CIPA | Questionnaire | Caregiver | x | x | 1-4 | |
| ● APQ | Questionnaire | Caregiver | x | x | 1-4 | |
|
| ● PHQ | Questionnaire | Caregiver | x | x | 1-4 |
| ● CTQ | Questionnaire | Caregiver | x | x | 1-4 | |
| ● BSSS | Questionnaires | Caregiver | x | x | 1-4 | |
|
| ● ETI, ETI-KJ | Questionnaire, Interview | Child, Caregiver | x | x | 1-4 |
| ● FAI | Questionnaire, Interview | Child, Caregiver | x | x | 1-4 | |
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| ● NIT | Child narratives (Video Coding) | Child, parent | x | x | 1-4 |
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| ● CBQ | Questionnaire | Caregiver | x | x | 1-4 |
|
| ● SPPC-D | Questionnaire | Child | x | 1-4 | |
|
| ● ERS | Questionnaire | Caregiver, Teacher | x | 1-4 | |
|
| ● TSST-C | Questionnaire | x | 2,3 | ||
|
| ● SOCOMP | Questionnaire | Teacher | x | x | 1-4 |
|
| ● ICU | Questionnaire | Teacher | x | x | 1-4 |
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| ● Height | Measurement | - | x | x | 1-4 |
| ● Weight | (Measuring tape/scales) | |||||
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| ● Tanner Scales | Questionnaire | Child | x | 2-4 | |
N.B. APQ = Alabama Parenting Questionnaire, ASSIS = Arizona Social Support Interview Schedule, BPI = Berkeley Puppet Interview, BSSS = Berlin Social Support Scales, CBCL = Child Behavior Checklist, CBQ = Children’s Behavior Questionnaire, CES-DC = Center for Epidemiological Studies Depression Scale for Children, CHILD-S = Children’s Depression Screener, CIPA = Coparenting Inventory for Parents and Adolescents, CTQ = Childhood Trauma Questionnaire, CTS-PC = Parent–child Conflict Tactics Scales, ERS = Ego resiliency Scales, ETI = Essener Trauma Inventar, ETI-CA = Essen Trauma-Inventory for Children and Adolescents, FAI = Family Adversity Index, FES = Family Environment Scales, ICU = Inventory of Callous-Unemotional Traits, K-SADS-PL = Schedule for affective disorders and schizophrenia for school-age children present and lifetime version, MCS = Maltreatment Classification System, MNBS = Multidimensional Neglectful Behavior Scale, NIT = Narrative Interaction Task, PAPA = Preschool Age Psychiatric Assessment, PHQ = Patient Health Questionnaire, PVS = Peer Victimization Scale, SCARED = Screen for Child Anxiety Related Disorders, SDQ = Strengths & Difficulties Questionnaire, SOCOMP = Self and Other oriented Social Competences, SPPC-D = Self-Perception Profile for Children, SSR-DE = Deutsche Version des Sleep Self Report, TSST-C = Trier Social Stress Test for Children, YSR = Youth Self-Report
aDiagnostic interviews in these samples were collected prior to AMIS
Assessment of child neurobiological and genetic factors
| Variables | Source | Measure | Assessment | Age groups | Samples | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| 4-8 | 9-14 | ||||
|
| ● Hair | ● Cortisol | Normal appointment | x | x | 1-4 |
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| ● Plasma/Saliva | ● Steroid metabolomics | Trier Social Stress Test for Children (TSST-C) | x | 2a,3a | |
| ● Methylation | ||||||
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| ● Saliva | ● Saliva cortisol | TSST-C | x | 2a,3a | |
| ● Plasma | ● Blood cortisol | |||||
| ● α-Amylase | ||||||
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| ● Saliva/Plasma | ● Focus on HPA-axis-related genes | Normal appointment | x | x | 1-4 |
aTSST-Cs will only be conducted in a subsample of N = 80-100 children