Department of Psychology, Stanford University, Stanford, CA, USA.
J Child Psychol Psychiatry. 2024 Aug;65(8):1037-1046. doi: 10.1111/jcpp.13942. Epub 2023 Dec 29.
Exposure to adversity early in life (ELA) has been associated with elevated risk for depression during adolescence, particularly for females; the mechanisms underlying this association, however, are poorly understood. One potential mechanism linking ELA and sex differences in depressive symptoms is sleep disturbances, which increase during adolescence and are more common in females. Here, we examined whether sleep disturbances mediate the association between ELA and increases in depressive symptoms during adolescence and whether this mediation differs by sex.
224 (N = 132 females) youth were recruited at age 9-13 years and assessed every 2 years across three timepoints. At the first timepoint, we conducted extensive interviews about stressful events participants experienced; participants provided subjective severity ratings of events and we objectively scored the severity of each event. Self-reported sleep disturbances and depressive symptoms were assessed at all timepoints. We conducted linear mixed models to estimate both initial levels and changes in sleep disturbances and depressive symptoms, and moderated mediation analyses to test whether initial levels and/or changes in sleep disturbances mediated the association of ELA (objective and subjective) with increases in depressive symptoms across adolescence and whether the mediations differed by sex.
While higher initial levels and increases in sleep problems were uniquely associated with increases in depressive symptoms for males and females, they were related to ELA differently by sex. For females, greater ELA (both objectively and subjectively rated) was associated with higher initial levels of sleep problems, which in turn were associated with increases in depressive symptoms from early to late adolescence. In contrast, for males, ELA exposure was not associated with either initial levels of, or increases in, sleep problems.
These findings highlight the role of sleep disturbances during the transition to adolescence in mediating sex differences in the effects of ELA on depressive symptoms.
早期生活逆境(ELA)暴露与青少年期抑郁风险升高有关,尤其是女性;然而,这种关联的机制尚不清楚。一种潜在的将 ELA 与抑郁症状的性别差异联系起来的机制是睡眠障碍,这种障碍在青少年时期会增加,并且在女性中更为常见。在这里,我们研究了睡眠障碍是否在 ELA 与青少年期抑郁症状增加之间的关联中起中介作用,以及这种中介作用是否因性别而异。
224 名(N=132 名女性)青少年在 9-13 岁时被招募,并在三个时间点进行了每两年一次的评估。在第一个时间点,我们对参与者经历的压力事件进行了广泛的访谈;参与者对事件的主观严重程度进行了评分,我们对每个事件的严重程度进行了客观评分。在所有时间点都评估了自我报告的睡眠障碍和抑郁症状。我们进行了线性混合模型来估计睡眠障碍和抑郁症状的初始水平和变化,并进行了调节中介分析,以检验 ELA(客观和主观)与青少年期抑郁症状增加之间的关联是否通过睡眠障碍的初始水平和/或变化来介导,以及这些中介作用是否因性别而异。
虽然较高的初始水平和睡眠问题的增加与男性和女性的抑郁症状增加有关,但它们与性别有关。对于女性来说,更大的 ELA(客观和主观评分)与更高的初始睡眠问题水平相关,而这些睡眠问题又与从青春期早期到晚期的抑郁症状增加相关。相比之下,对于男性来说,ELA 暴露与睡眠问题的初始水平或增加都没有关系。
这些发现强调了睡眠障碍在向青春期过渡期间在介导 ELA 对抑郁症状的影响中的性别差异中的作用。