| Literature DB >> 34924938 |
Luisa Lo Iacono1,2, Cristina Trentini1, Valeria Carola1,2.
Abstract
A large body of research has documented the long-term harms of childhood sexual abuse (CSA) on an individual's emotional-adaptive function and mental health. Recent studies have also provided evidence of the biological impact of CSA, implicating specific alterations in many systems, including the endocrine and immune systems, and in DNA and chromatin, in the pathogenesis of medical disorders. Although the effects of CSA are often examined with regard to the general impact of early-life traumatic experiences, the study of CSA per sè, as a trigger of specific pathogenic pathways, would be more appropriate to understand their long-term implications and develop tailored diagnostic and therapeutic strategies. Based on these premises, this narrative minireview summarizes the research on the short-term and long-term sequelae of CSA, focusing on dysregulation of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis, the effects on the immune system, and the changes to DNA through altered methylation. Also, we discuss the literature that examines dysfunctional DNA telomere erosion and oxidative stress markers as a sign of CSA. Finally, recent evidence of the intergenerational transmission of the effects of CSA is reported. The impact of CSA on brain connectivity and functions is out of the scope of this review, thus brain imaging studies are not included. The results of this minireview are discussed, considering their implications for prevention and clinical practice.Entities:
Keywords: HPA axis; childhood sexual abuse; clinical psychology; immune system; telomeres
Year: 2021 PMID: 34924938 PMCID: PMC8678607 DOI: 10.3389/fnins.2021.771511
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Neurosci ISSN: 1662-453X Impact factor: 4.677
Short-term biological consequences of childhood sexual abuse (CSA) exposure.
| Article | Age | Blood/Saliva/Buccal | Sample size | Biological function affected | Main results | |
|
| 7–12 years | Blood | 11 | HPA |
| Children in institutional settings demonstrated an attenuated stress reactivity pattern, interpreted as an apparent lack of an appropriate HPA response when faced with a further stressor (e.g., forensic interview and medical examination). |
|
| 9–17 years | Blood | 38 | HPA |
| In children who developed a PTSD, oxidative stress was higher following multiple abuses and sexual abuses within the family. |
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| 10–17 years | Blood | 90 | HPA |
| CSA group showed high oxidative stress and low antioxidant process profile. |
|
| 7–12 years | Blood | 11 | Immune system |
| SA children in institutional setting had higher morning IL-6 concentrations during their clinic visit, which were inversely correlated with plasma cortisol concentrations. |
|
| 4, 12, 18 months | Buccal | 155 | Epigenetic and Chromatin |
| Mothers’ high scores in the ACE questionnaire predicted shorter telomere length and emerging (mainly externalizing) behavioral problems in the offspring. |
|
| 5 and 10 years | Buccal | 236 | Epigenetic and Chromatin |
| Accelerated telomere erosion was observed in children who were exposed to multiple forms of violence and the effects worsen over time. |
|
| 3–5 years | Saliva | 250 | Epigenetic and Chromatin |
| Children who experienced moderate-severe levels of maltreatment within 6 months prior to the analysis, had longer telomeres and higher mtDNA, possibly reflecting compensatory changes in response to recent trauma. |
HPA, hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis; IL-6, Interleukin 6; ACE, adverse childhood experiences; mtDNA, mitochondrial DNA.
Long-term biological consequences of childhood sexual abuse (CSA) exposure.
| Article | Adult/Child | Age | Blood/Saliva/Buccal/Hair | Sample size | Biological function affected | Main results | |
|
| A | 18–45 years | Blood | 49 | HPA | ↑ | Women with a history of childhood sexual/physical abuse exhibited increased pituitary adrenal and autonomic responses to stress compared to controls. |
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| A | 16–56 years | Saliva-Hair | 43 | HPA | ↕ | CSA group displayed lower levels of saliva cortisol, measured after exposure to idiographic adverse experiences (phasic), and higher hair cortisol levels compared to control (tonic). |
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| A | 29–66 years | Saliva | 17 | HPA | ↑ | CSA is associated with long-lasting changes in diurnal patterns of cortisol secretion in bariatric surgery patients. Thus, altered HPA axis regulation may be risk factor to adult obesity in CSA victims. |
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| A | 18–40 years | Saliva | 135 | HPA | ↑ | Women with CSA histories displayed significantly higher pre-pregnancy BMI, greater anxiety symptoms, increasing cortisol awakening response, and did not display the protective shift to responsiveness, over pregnancy. |
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| A | 25–42 years | Blood | 702 | Immune system | ↑ | CRP and IL-6 levels are higher in CSA survivors compared to the non-abused group, the association between sexual abuse and inflammation markers is slightly stronger when the abuse occurs in adolescence rather than childhood. |
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| A | 40–60 years | – | 100 | Immune system | ↓ | The rates of CSA in people living with HIV positivity are estimated at 30 to 53%, together with high rates of illicit drug use, and sex trade experiences. |
| A | – | – | – | Immune system | ↓ | Trauma is associated with lower rates of HIV disclosure and increases in risk behaviors, poorer mental health, substance abuse, and immunologic outcomes. | |
| A | – | – | – | Immune system | ↕ | Articles based on children samples reported blurred results, while in adult samples the effects seem to be clearer with most studies reporting increased inflammatory activity, i.e., higher levels of IL-6, TNF-α, and C-reactive protein. | |
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| A | 18–65 years | Blood | 394 | Immune system | ↑ | In Major Depressive Disorder patients a linear relationship was shown between CSA and pro-inflammatory cytokine levels, while more recent stressful life events were not related to these inflammatory markers. |
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| A | >18 years | Blood-Saliva | 1,1647 | Epigenetic and chromatin | NO | Increase in mtDNA and reduction in telomeric DNA were found contingent on the presence of Major Depression. No changes were reported in subjects who reported stressful life events, including CSA, but had never been depressed. |
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| A | 25–42 years | Blood | 1135 | Epigenetic and chromatin | NO | The relationship between physical abuse and telomere length seemed stronger than that for sexual abuse, but the effects were not statistically significant and there was no evidence of a dose-response relationship. |
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| A | 20–84 years | Blood | 180 | Epigenetic and chromatin | NO | Only physical neglect in childhood activates telomere-shortening mechanisms (e.g., excessive cortisol, inflammatory activation), with the impact being greatest amongst older individuals, where the mechanism has had a longer time to evoke its detrimental effects. |
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| A | 35–70 years | Blood | 99 | Epigenetic and chromatin | NO | There were no effects of exposure to abuse or abuse severity on mean telomere length. However, as social support increased, mean telomere length increased, but only for those women exposed to less severe forms of sexual abuse. |
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| A | >18 years | Blood | 3232 | Epigenetic and chromatin | ↓ | Sexual abuse in childhood or adolescence was associated with a marker of accelerated biological aging, decreased telomere length. Sexual abuse was more strongly and consistently associated with telomere length than physical abuse. |
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| A | 20–45 years | Blood | 215 | Epigenetic and chromatin | ↑ | Childhood sexual abuse was associated with increased NR3C1 promoter methylation. The severity of childhood abuses and neglect positively correlated with NR3C1 promoter methylation. |
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| A | 32–48 years | Blood | 155 | Epigenetic and chromatin | ↑ | CSA was associated with degree of methylation of the CpG island upstream of the SLC6A4, which mediated the impact of CSA on antisocial personality disorder symptoms, also potentiating the effect of 5HTT risk alleles. |
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| A | 39–57 years | Blood | 51 | Epigenetic and chromatin | ↑ | Female twins exposed to CSA exhibited a 1.63-fold average increase in the frequency of Micronuclei compared to non-exposed cotwins. The biological age of the CSA exposed twins was inferred to be 9.9 years older, suggesting cumulative effect. |
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| A + C | Mother > 18 years; infants | Blood | 151 | Epigenetic and Chromatin | ↓ | Severity of CSA was associated with shorter cord blood relative telomere length (rTL), and greater maternal familial emotional support in childhood was associated with longer cord blood rTL among male infants. |
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| A + C | Mother > 18 years; child 4, 12, and 18 months | Buccal | 155 | Epigenetic and Chromatin | ↓ | Mothers’ high scores in the ACE questionnaire predicted shorter telomere length and emerging behavioral problems, especially externalizing ones in the next generation |
HPA, hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis; BMI, body mass index; HIV, human immunodeficiency virus; IL-6, Interleukin 6; TNF-α, tumor necrosis factor- α; mtDNA, mitochondrial DNA; NR3C1, nuclear receptor subfamily 3 group C member 1; 5HTT, solute carrier family 6 member 4.