| Literature DB >> 30968208 |
Jason Lang1, Judith McKie2, Helen Smith3, Angela McLaughlin4, Christopher Gillberg5,6, Paul G Shiels7, Helen Minnis5.
Abstract
A systematic review following PRISMA guidelines was conducted to answer the question: What epigenetic, telomeric and associated biological changes are associated with exposure to adverse childhood experiences (ACEs) in the under 12s? Using PRISMA guidelines, appropriate databases were searched. 190 papers were returned with 38 articles fully reviewed. Articles were each independently quality rated by two authors using the Crowe Critical Appraisal Tool and data were extracted. Of the 38 articles, 23 were rated as very high quality. Most study participants were adults (n = 7769) with n = 727 child participants. Only seven of the very/high-quality studies were prospective and involved children. Methylation was the most studied method of epigenetic modification. There is some evidence supporting epigenetic modification of certain markers in participants exposed to ACEs measured in adulthood. Research is lacking on non-coding aspects of the epigenome and on coding aspects other than DNA methylation. There is some evidence of a more powerful effect on telomere length if physical neglect was involved. Much further work is required to model biological and psychological effects of epigenetic changes during childhood using prospective study designs. The effect of ACEs on the cellular ageing process during childhood is inadequately investigated and relies solely on measure of telomere length. Future research suggestions are proposed.Entities:
Keywords: Adverse childhood experiences; Biomarker; Child abuse and neglect; Epigenetics
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30968208 PMCID: PMC7501093 DOI: 10.1007/s00787-019-01329-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur Child Adolesc Psychiatry ISSN: 1018-8827 Impact factor: 4.785
Fig. 1PRISMA flowchart
Summary of characteristics: studies with participants exclusively under the age of 18
| References | Study size (participants and controls) | Exposure | Study design | Genome wide or gene specific | Quality | Tissue type | Direction of effect (hyper- or hypo-methylation) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Gene-specific studies | |||||||
| Fumagalli et al. [ | 56 VPT infants | NICU stay | Prospective longitudinal study | Gene specific—SLC64 | VHQ | Whole blood | Hyper-methylation of SLC64 |
| Montirosso et al. [ | 78 infants (48 pre-term 30 full term) | NICU stay | Comparative prospective longitudinal study (pre-term vs full-term infants) | Gene specific—SLC6A4 | VHQ | Whole blood | Hyper-methylation of SLC6A4 |
| Romens et al. [ | 56 children (18 physical maltreatment and 38 no report) | Physical maltreatment reports from child protection services | Cross-sectional study | Gene specific—NRC31 promotor region | VHQ | Whole blood | Hyper-methylation of NRC31 promotor regions |
| Tyrka et al. [ | 174 children (69 documented moderate to severe maltreatment and | Moderate to severe maltreatment | Cross-sectional study | Gene specific—NR3C1 and FKBP5 | HQ | Saliva | Hypo-methylation of FKBP5 |
| Genome-wide studies | |||||||
| Brody et al. [ | 399 participants (242 treatment group 157 controls) | Parental mental ill health Exposure to “harsh parenting” Treatment group exposed to SAAF programme intervention | Longitudinal follow-up of a randomised controlled trial | Genome wide (epigenetic age) | VHQ | Peripheral blood mononuclear cells | Association with parental depression and harsh parenting with increased epigenetic ageing. Association not seen in SAAF-exposed group |
| Cao-Lei et al. [ | 36 off-spring from ice storm-exposed mothers | Maternal pre-natal exposure to environmental stress/natural disaster | Prospective longitudinal study | Genome wide | HQ | T cells from peripheral blood Saliva | Differential methylation of various sites across genome |
| Telomere studies | |||||||
| Provenzi et al. [ | 46 VPT infants | NICU stay | Prospective longitudinal study | Telomere length | VHQ | Whole blood | Erosion (but not statistically significant across group) |
| Shalev et al. [ | 236 children | Exposure to at least one violence exposure | Prospective longitudinal study | Telomere length | VHQ | Buccal swab | Accelerated erosion of telomere length in children exposed to two or more types of violence |
| Inflammatory markers | |||||||
| Jiang et al. [ | 422 infants | Poverty, malnutrition and maternal depression | Prospective longitudinal study | Inflammatory biomarkers | HQ | Sera of whole blood | Increased inflammatory markers associated with increased adversity and decreased neurodevelopmental attainment` |
Fig. 2Specific genetic loci examined in VHQ/HQ studies