Introduction
Multimorbidity, corresponding to ‘the co-occurrence of at least two chronic conditions in the same individual’(Skou et al., Reference Skou, Mair, Fortin, Guthrie, Nunes, Miranda and Smith2022), affects, on average, about one-third of adults worldwide (Nguyen et al., Reference Nguyen, Manolova, Daskalopoulou, Vitoratou, Prince and Prina2019). Multimorbidity contributes to premature death, poorer functioning/quality of life, and increased health-care utilization (Menotti et al., Reference Menotti, Mulder, Nissinen, Giampaoli, Feskens and Kromhout2001; van Oostrom et al., Reference van Oostrom, Picavet, de Bruin, Stirbu, Korevaar, Schellevis and Baan2014; Vogeli et al., Reference Vogeli, Shields, Lee, Gibson, Marder, Weiss and Blumenthal2007). Deepening our understanding of types of multimorbidity and their implication on individuals' lives is important to improve patient-centered treatment recommendations, reduce the burden on health and health systems, and propose relevant preventive strategies (Bayliss et al., Reference Bayliss, Bonds, Boyd, Davis, Finke, Fox and Stange2014; Salisbury, Reference Salisbury2012).
The long-term consequences of events occurring during childhood in relation to multiple diseases development is of growing interest, especially early life psychosocial stress that can be studied by the concept of adverse childhood experiences (ACEs). ACEs capture cumulative effects of stressful intrafamilial experiences during childhood by using indicators measuring whether individuals were subjected to violence, abuse, neglect, or growing up in a household with substance use problems or mental health problems and combining them into a proxy measure (Felitti et al., Reference Felitti, Anda, Nordenberg, Williamson, Spitz, Edwards and Marks1998). ACEs have been previously associated with premature mortality (Bellis et al., Reference Bellis, Hughes, Leckenby, Hardcastle, Perkins and Lowey2015) as well as various individual chronic conditions, e.g. depression, stroke, or cancer (Bellis et al., Reference Bellis, Hughes, Leckenby, Hardcastle, Perkins and Lowey2015; Felitti et al., Reference Felitti, Anda, Nordenberg, Williamson, Spitz, Edwards and Marks1998; Hughes et al., Reference Hughes, Bellis, Hardcastle, Sethi, Butchart, Mikton and Dunne2017; Kelly-Irving, Mabile, Grosclaude, Lang, & Delpierre, Reference Kelly-Irving, Mabile, Grosclaude, Lang and Delpierre2013).
It has been hypothesized that ACEs may play an indirect role in morbidity through their influence on unhealthy behaviors (Hughes et al., Reference Hughes, Bellis, Hardcastle, Sethi, Butchart, Mikton and Dunne2017) and low SEP (Metzler, Merrick, Klevens, Ports, & Ford, Reference Metzler, Merrick, Klevens, Ports and Ford2017), but may also have a direct role through stress manifested by physiological disruptions.
Several recent studies have highlighted a strong relationship between ACEs and multimorbidity. Sinnott et al. (Sinnott, Mc Hugh, Fitzgerald, Bradley, & Kearney, Reference Sinnott, Mc Hugh, Fitzgerald, Bradley and Kearney2015) found in an Irish cohort study that a history of ACEs was independently associated with multimorbidity across twenty chronic diseases. Subsequent research by Tomasdottir et al. (Reference Tomasdottir, Sigurdsson, Petursson, Kirkengen, Krokstad, McEwen and Getz2015), Henchoz et al. (Reference Henchoz, Seematter-Bagnoud, Nanchen, Büla, von Gunten, Démonet and Santos-Eggimann2019), Lin, Wang, Lu, Chen, & Guo (Reference Lin, Wang, Lu, Chen and Guo2021), and Yang, Hu, Silventoinen, & Martikainen (Reference Yang, Hu, Silventoinen and Martikainen2020) further supported this association across thirteen, twenty-one and fourteen diseases. More recently, Chandrasekar et al. (Reference Chandrasekar, Lacey, Chaturvedi, Hughes, Patalay and Khanolkar2023) reinforced the association between ACEs and an increasing burden of multimorbidity using a national birth cohort (The 1946 MRC National Survey of Health and Development) involving eighteen health disorders from mid-adulthood into early old age. These studies considered many physical and psychological diseases and were carried out on populations aged 35 and over. Among all adult medical conditions which can be associated to ACEs, some manifest early signs during childhood (unmet developmental needs); these specific conditions are of special importance to target early prevention efforts of multimorbidity across the life course. Yet, to our knowledge, no studies have shed light on the link between ACEs and early-appearing morbidities from early adulthood and across the life course.
Common conditions in multimorbidity such as, excess body weight (Thomas-Eapen, Reference Thomas-Eapen2021) and depression (Hunter et al., Reference Hunter, Knuiman, Musk, Hui, Murray, Beilby and James2021; Zhen et al., Reference Zhen, Liu, Qiu, Fu, Hu and Su2022), often trace their origins back to childhood. These conditions have been associated with low SEP, unhealthy childhood and a higher prevalence among those exposed to ACEs. Researchers have also described a biological connection between depression and overweight, potentially linked to the disrupted physiological responses triggered by ACEs (Sonino & Fava, Reference Sonino and Fava2001; Wester et al., Reference Wester, Staufenbiel, Veldhorst, Visser, Manenschijn, Koper and van Rossum2014). Previous studies have individually examined the risk of being overweight or depressed in relation to ACEs separately (Bellis et al., Reference Bellis, Hughes, Ford, Ramos Rodriguez, Sethi and Passmore2019; Thomas, Hyppönen, & Power, Reference Thomas, Hyppönen and Power2008). However, considering their co-occurrence and bidirectional relationship (Milaneschi, Simmons, van Rossum, & Penninx, Reference Milaneschi, Simmons, van Rossum and Penninx2019), exploring the simultaneous presence of depression and overweight is crucial in understanding how ACEs relate to the future risk of multimorbidity among both men and women.
A recent study found that men and women have distinct patterns of childhood adversities, with women experiencing more complex and varied patterns of childhood adversity (Haahr-Pedersen et al., Reference Haahr-Pedersen, Perera, Hyland, Vallières, Murphy, Hansen and Cloitre2020). Additionally, a previous study on adults in the United States suggests that a higher proportion of women (14%) could suffer from comorbid overweight-depression than men (7%) (Heo, Pietrobelli, Fontaine, Sirey, & Faith Reference Heo, Pietrobelli, Fontaine, Sirey and Faith2006). Despite these findings, the influence of sex in the association between ACEs and long-term overweight-depression comorbidity risk has not been thoroughly assessed.
Using data from the 1958 National Child Development Study (NCDS58), we propose to examine the relationship between stress-inducing psychosocial exposures, as measured through ACEs, and risk of overweight-depression comorbidity and each separate condition at multiple time points, from young adulthood, and to assess the potential pathways that link them. In this cohort, we firstly assessed whether ACEs were associated with a higher risk of overweight-depression comorbidity at 23, 33, and 42 years considering a set of baseline confounders and, if these associations were stronger than those observed for participants with only one condition. Secondly, we tested if adult SEP and health behaviors could explain any part of the association between ACEs and risk of overweight-depression comorbidity and each separate condition at all ages. Lastly, we explored whether the effect of ACEs on comorbidity's risk differed between men and women.
Methods
Study design and participants
We analyzed data from the NCDS58, an on-going prospective population cohort study, which included all live births during one week in Great Britain (n = 18 558). Data collected at birth included participants' pre-natal, birth and parental characteristics (Power & Elliott, Reference Power and Elliott2006). Subsequent data collections were carried out on cohort members to collect information on aspects of health, education, social and economic development from age 7 to 62. Written informed consent was obtained from parents for underage cohort members and, as adults, ethical approval was provided following guidelines of the National Research Ethics Advisory Panel.
Follow-up of the initial 18 558 birth cohort members was considered as being good (Clark, Caldwell, Power, & Stansfeld, Reference Clark, Caldwell, Power and Stansfeld2010). Participants with missing data for the outcome and exposure were excluded leaving a total of 7764 participants for this study.
Adverse childhood experiences (ACEs)
ACEs were defined as ‘a set of traumatic and stressful psychosocial conditions in the familial environment that tend to co-occur, persist over time and are outside of the child's control’(Gondek, Patalay, & Lacey, Reference Gondek, Patalay and Lacey2021; Kelly-Irving et al., Reference Kelly-Irving, Mabile, Grosclaude, Lang and Delpierre2013). Data were collected, through survey questions, at ages 7, 11, and 16 on six different dimensions of ACEs: (i) Child in care; (ii) Physical neglect; (iii) Contact with probation; (iv) Parental separation; (v) Family mental illness; (vi) Alcohol abuse. Health visitors, parents, and teachers helped in the administration and completion of the survey.
An ACEs score (scale[0;6]) was constructed by adding scores of 1 (ACE event) or 0 (no event) by ACE dimensions. A conservative approach of missing data was used: missing values in the score were defined as having missing values in all ACEs dimensions of all three questionnaires; otherwise, missing data points were regarded as zeros. Some dimensions of ACEs were not available in all surveys however, only one data point was necessary to create the ACE score. A score of 6 referred to 6 different types of adversities experienced between 7 and 16 years. The score was categorized into three groups: 0, 1 and, 2 or more adversities.
Overweight
Overweight was defined from BMI values at 23, 33, and 42 years; they were dichotomized as (i) ‘overweight’: above sex-specific median values of BMI and (ii) ‘non-overweight’: below sex-specific median values of BMI. Weight and height measures were self-reported (at 23 & 42 years) or measured during the interview (at 33 years). BMI was calculated as weight (kg) divided by the square of height (m2).
Depression
Depression symptoms were assessed using the Malaise Inventory (MI) questionnaire, an established scale to measure signs of psychological distress (Rodgers, Pickles, Power, Collishaw, & Maughan, Reference Rodgers, Pickles, Power, Collishaw and Maughan1999; Rutter, Tizard, & Whitmore, Reference Rutter, Tizard and Whitmore1971) at ages 23, 33, and 42. The NCDS used the long version containing 24 questions. A score of 8 or more was defined as a high level of depression.
Overweight-depression comorbidity and each separate condition
The outcome of interest was created at 23, 33, and 42 years as four-category variable (no condition, overweight only, depression only and overweight-depression comorbidity). This variable configuration was essential to estimate the odds of being comorbid related to ACEs relative to the odds of not having either condition and comparing odd magnitudes with the risk of having either condition separately.
Covariates
Key potential confounders of ACEs, overweight and depression were selected based on previous research (Gondek et al., Reference Gondek, Patalay and Lacey2021). They were divided according to the life-stages that they corresponded to: early life and childhood factors, and adulthood factors. A detailed description is provided in online Supplementary Table S1.
At birth, social and biological confounders were collected from a questionnaire completed by the participant's mother: mother's age at birth, maternal smoking during pregnancy, mother's education level, parents' social class. Sex and birthweight were also registered. Information on mother's breastfeeding behavior was collected at age 7. A binary (presence/absence) childhood pathologies variable was constructed from records of congenita, chronic physiological dysfunctions, disabilities and special schooling at 7, 11, and 16 years.
Adulthood confounders included health behavior variables and SEP indicators for all outcome periods (23, 33, and 42 years). Smoking, alcohol consumption, physical activity patterns and diet (at 33 and 42 years only) were the health behaviors selected. Education (23 years), wealth (33 years), social class and marital status (33 and 42 years), housing tenure (42 years) were the selected SEP indicators.
Another group of confounders were available only at age 42: risky health behaviors such as continued alcohol problems and prior use of drugs.
Statistical analyses
Means and frequencies by ACEs and by the four-category outcome variable were reported for all continuous and categorical covariates, respectively. The χ2 test or Fisher's exact test for categorical variables and t test or Wilcoxon rank test for continuous variables were performed to estimate bivariate associations.
Multinomial logistic regression models were used to examine the relationship between ACEs and the four-category outcome with relative risk ratio (RRR) coefficients and 95% confidence intervals (CI). After testing the crude association, we first fitted a model adjusted only for sex (model 1). We subsequently adjusted model 1 for each early-life factor to look at their individual influence on the association and built a model adjusted on all early-life factors (model 2). Similarly, we adjusted model 2 for each adult covariate and by blocks of variables (i.e. health behaviors and adulthood SEP). Finally, we constructed a fully adjusted model including all variables simultaneously (model 3). These models were ran at each time point.
A moderating effect of sex on the relationship between ACEs and the four-category outcome was investigated at all ages (23, 33, and 42 years) given that overweight and depression are recorded as sex-patterned in the literature. Significance of ACEs and sex interaction term was tested. Likelihood ratio tests testing the goodness of fit between fully adjusted models including and not including an interaction term were performed. To further understand interaction effects at the outcome period where the likelihood ratio test favored a statistically difference in goodness of fit (at 42 years), a 6-category variable combining the sex and ACEs variables was constructed and fully-adjusted model was ran: men with 0 ACEs, men with 1 ACE, men with ⩾ 2 ACEs, women with 0 ACEs, women with 1 ACE, women with ⩾ 2 ACEs. Men with 0 ACEs were the reference level.
Additional analyses
At age 42, we added two models where model 2 and model 3 (as detailed above) were further adjusted for variables related to adult risky health behaviors.
To justify the use of overweight and depression as comorbidity candidates related to ACEs in the NCDS58 cohort, we checked the association between ACEs and the binary overweight and depression variables through logistic regression models. Additionally, these analyses assessed the overweight and depression independent risks while maximizing the sample size of these categories of interest (v. ‘overweight only’ and ‘depression only’ categories of the four-category outcome). This helped elucidate on the fact that the differences in risk magnitude observed across categories (independent condition v. co-occurring conditions) of the four-category outcome were not solely due to created group size variations. Models were adjusted for early-life factors.
Missing data
To control for possible bias due to missing data in the study population, covariates with missing data were imputed via multiple imputation using the MICE R package (van Buuren & Groothuis-Oudshoorn, Reference van Buuren and Groothuis-Oudshoorn2011). All variables considered in this study including those used for additional analyses were used for carrying out the imputations and are listed in online Supplementary Table S1. Fifteen imputations were conducted taking the missing-at-random assumption. To obtain summary regression estimates from the fifteen multiply imputed datasets, Rubin's combination rules were used (Rubin, Reference Rubin1976).
Sensitivity analyses
To test the robustness of our results, we wanted to run analyses in a subsample of complete cases (N = 3901). However, the small number of participants with comorbid overweight-depression did not provide enough statistical power (N = 33(0.8%), 75(1.9%) and 181(4.6%) individuals who were comorbid at 23, 33, and 42 years) and instead, complete cases analysis was only conducted on the association between ACEs and binary variables (i.e. overweight and depression).
Also, main analyses were repeated when replacing the binary overweight variable with a binary obese indicator (more severe condition defined as the upper sex-specific quartile of BMI).
As well, consistent influence of health behaviors and adulthood SEP intermediate variables at prior waves of the studied outcome (ex: outcome 33 and 42 years) was tested on the link between ACEs and overweight-depression comorbidity and each separate condition. The influence of varying dimensions of health behaviors and socioeconomic factors was assessed since these variables differed across time points.
All statistical analyses were performed using R version 3.1.2 within the R Studio environment.
Results
The sample selection flowchart is provided in Fig. 1. Our study sample consisted of a total of 7762 individuals (41,8% of the initial total population).
The distribution of individuals by study variable did not differ by more than 10% between the included and excluded participants except for education at 23, wealth at 33 and use of illegal drugs. Excluded individuals had a lower education level at 23, lower wealth at 33 and fewer records of illegal drug use (online Supplementary Table S2). Description of all variables considered for the study sample is provided in Table 1.
Women represented 52.0% of the study population. In the sample, 24.2% experienced at least one adversity. The proportion of overweight and depressed people increased respectively over time, consequently, the proportion of individuals with a comorbid overweight-depression went from 1.3% at 23 years to 6.5% at 42 years. Characteristics of the study population according to ACEs and to overweight-depression comorbidity and each separate condition, respectively, are shown in Table 1 and online Supplementary Table S3.
Participants who suffer from comorbid overweight-depression were more likely to be women, to come from disadvantaged parental socioeconomic backgrounds, to have experienced childhood pathologies, to have had skilled manual professions at 42 years, to have low wealth, to be abstainers and to be physically inactive.
Association between ACEs and overweight-depression comorbidity each separate condition
Results from multinomial logistic regression on ACEs exposure and the risk of overweight-depression comorbidity and each separate condition are given in Table 2.
Among those who experienced only 1 ACE, an association was not observed with overweight only yet was observed with depression only (RRR23y [95% CI] = 1.79 [1.41–2.27], RRR33y [95% CI] = 1.79 [1.35–2.37], RRR42y [95% CI] = 1.54 [1.20–1.96], model 1).
At each time point, participants who experienced 2+ACEs were more likely to be overweight only (RRR23y [95% CI] = 1.39 [1.07–1.81], RRR33y [95% CI] = 1.33 [1.07–1.64], RRR42y [95% CI] = 1.27 [1.02–1.58], model 1) compared to those who experienced 0 ACEs. These associations were partly explained by early-life factors, especially parent's social class (RRR23y [95% CI] = 1.22 [0.93–1.59], RRR33y [95% CI] = 1.23 [0.99–1.53], RRR42y [95% CI] = 1.13 [0.91–1.42]) and further explained by adulthood intermediate variables and no longer significant in the fully adjusted model (RRR23y [95% CI] = 1.01 [0.77–1.32], RRR33y [95% CI] = 1.08 [0.86–1.35], RRR42y [95% CI] = 1.04 [0.82–1.31], model 3).
At each time point, participants who experienced 2+ACEs were more likely to be depressed only (RRR23y [95% CI] = 2.71 [1.90–3.86], RRR33y [95% CI] = 2.85 [1.87–4.34], RRR42y [95% CI] = 1.74 [1.14–2.65], model 1) compared to those who experienced 0ACEs. Associations with depression only at all time points were partially explained by baseline characteristics, especially parents' social class, and intermediate variables however, a relationship remained in the fully adjusted model at 23 and 33 years (RRR23y [95% CI] = 1.59 [1.10–2.31], RRR33y [95% CI] = 1.70 [1.09–2.66], model 3).
At each time point, a strong graded association between ACEs and risk of comorbid overweight-depression was observed: those who experienced 1ACE had a higher risk of being comorbid than those exposed to 0ACEs (RRR23y [95% CI] = 1.75 [1.09–2.80], RRR33y [95% CI] = 1.83 [1.33–2.53], RRR42y [95% CI] = 1.49 [1.19–1.87], model 1) and, among those who experienced 2+ACEs, the relative risk was even stronger (RRR23y [95% CI] = 3.80 [2.10–6.88], RRR33y [95% CI] = 3.45 [2.21–5.39], RRR42y [95% CI] = 2.26 [1.59–3.22], model 1). The relationships between ACEs and comorbid overweight-depression were larger in effect size compared to associations with overweight or depression only, particularly with exposure to 2+ACEs.
The risk of comorbid overweight-depression was reduced after adjustment for baseline variables and early life SEP (RRR23y [95% CI] = 2.62 [1.42–4.83], RRR33y [95% CI] = 2.44 [1.54–3.85], RRR42y [95% CI] = 1.65 [1.15–2.37]), model 2, 2+ACEs). Associations were further explained by adult social characteristics or health behaviors though a relative risk was maintained after controlling for all intermediate variables (RRR23y [95% CI] = 2.00 [1.08–3.72], RRR33y [95% CI] = 1.68 [1.05–2.70], RRR42y [95% CI] = 1.27 [0.87–1.86], model 3, 2+ACEs).
Association between a combined variable of ACEs and sex on overweight-depression comorbidity and each separate condition
Sex and ACEs interaction term was not significant in our models at all ages however, as presented in online Supplementary Table S4, likelihood ratio tests on imputed data showed a statistically different fit of goodness between models with and without interaction for the four-category outcome at 42y (p value < 0.10).
Figure 2 shows that, at 42y, the risk of comorbid overweight-depression increased for men who experienced ACEs (ORmen2+ACEs [95% CI] = 1.58 [0.93–2.69]) and decreased for women with or without record of ACEs (ORwomen1ACE [95% CI] = 0.82 [0.57–1.18]), compared to men who experienced no adversities. Here, there was no clear evidence that the relative risk for women with 2 + ACEs goes in the opposite direction to their women counterparts since confidence intervals overlap (ORwomen2+ACEs [95% CI] = 0.80 [0.46–1.38]). Results seemed also to differ for overweight and depression modalities, where risk of depression increased for men experiencing ACEs and women with 0 or one adversity but not for women with two or more adversities compared to men who experienced no adversities. Regarding overweight, no clear trend appeared for men experiencing ACEs although women with and without ACEs had a decreased risk compared to men who experienced no adversities.
Additional analyses
Further additional adjustment for risky behaviors at 42 years only slightly lowered the association between ACEs and comorbid overweight-depression risk (RRR2+ACEs [95% CI] = 1.51 [1.04–2.17], model 2 + risky behaviors, Fig. 3).
Association between ACEs and overweight or depression outcomes examined individually at each period are given and described in online Supplementary Table S5a and S5b respectively together with the results of the ACEs and sex combined variables on overweight or depression outcomes examined individually (online Supplementary Fig. S1). Same tendencies were observed than those in the main analyses.
Sensitivity analyses
Complete cases analyses indicated that our findings were not affected by the imputation process (online Supplementary Table S6). Sensitivity analyses using obesity instead of overweight condition resulted in weaker associations (online Supplementary Tables S7, S8).
Results after adjustment for adulthood confounders from a prior period to the outcome studied did not explain further the association compared to equivalent confounder adjustment co-occurring with the outcome (online Supplementary Table S9).
Discussion
Our study suggests that adversities in childhood are associated with a higher risk of comorbid overweight-depression compared to either condition taken separately. These associations are observed in all three periods from young adulthood but weakened over time. Part of the association between ACEs and comorbid overweight-depression was explained by adjustment for baseline confounders and early life SEP as well as by age-specific adult SEP and health behaviors. An association remained after considering all of these factors. Additionally, our results suggest that men and women have a different ACEs-comorbid overweight-depression risk relationship at age 42, where the risk for men increases with cumulated exposure to ACEs but not for women.
In our analyses, among potential early-life confounders considered, those related to household SEP had the greater influence on the association, especially parents' social class. This suggests that part of the effect of ACEs on overweight, depression and comorbid overweight-depression is related to the socioeconomic environment in which the child lives. In 2021, Khanolkar & Patalay (Reference Khanolkar and Patalay2021) showed that socioeconomic disadvantage in childhood and adulthood are associated with greater risk of suffering from the co-occurrence of mental ill-health and overweight across the lifecourse in NCDS58. Disadvantaged childhood social class was associated with increased risk of comorbidity in adulthood even after accounting for adulthood socioeconomic circumstances, which is consistent with our findings.
In line with previous studies investigating the association between ACEs and multimorbidity in older age, part of the association was explained by adjustment for health behaviors and/or adulthood SEP (Henchoz et al., Reference Henchoz, Seematter-Bagnoud, Nanchen, Büla, von Gunten, Démonet and Santos-Eggimann2019; Lin et al., Reference Lin, Wang, Lu, Chen and Guo2021; Sinnott et al., Reference Sinnott, Mc Hugh, Fitzgerald, Bradley and Kearney2015; Tomasdottir et al., Reference Tomasdottir, Sigurdsson, Petursson, Kirkengen, Krokstad, McEwen and Getz2015; Yang et al., Reference Yang, Hu, Silventoinen and Martikainen2020). Overweight and depression are known to share common risk factors, which are associated to ACEs (Anda, Butchart, Felitti, & Brown, Reference Anda, Butchart, Felitti and Brown2010; Hoare, Skouteris, Fuller-Tyszkiewicz, Millar, & Allender, Reference Hoare, Skouteris, Fuller-Tyszkiewicz, Millar and Allender2014; Smith, Fu, & Kobayashi, Reference Smith, Fu and Kobayashi2020), like the adoption of hazardous lifestyle behaviors, such as smoking, unhealthy diet or problems with alcohol consumption (Felitti et al., Reference Felitti, Anda, Nordenberg, Williamson, Spitz, Edwards and Marks1998). ACEs could also affect adult SEP, which in turn can lead to unhealthy lifestyle practices in adulthood (Shonkoff, Garner, Committee on Psychosocial Aspects of Child and Family Health, Committee on Early Childhood, Adoption, and Dependent Care, & Section on Developmental and Behavioral Pediatrics, Reference Shonkoff and Garner2012). Persisting associations are observed after adjusting for all covariates simultaneously, except for the outcome at 42 years. Some explanation to the loss of association only found at age 42 could be that the non-adjusted risk estimation at start was lower in magnitude compared to the ones at 23 and 33 years. It is noteworthy that although the association was no longer statistically significant at 42 years, adjustment by intermediate variables individually did not have a major influence on risk reduction (e.g. the most reduced OR2+ACEs at 42y remained at 1.41 after controlling for household tenure, Table 2).
Overall, the persisting associations imply the existence of other mechanisms.
While many of the mechanisms underlying these associations remain unclear, it has been proposed that disruptions in stress response systems may be at play. Specifically, prolonged exposure to childhood adversities, especially early in development, may elicit sustained activation of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis and its glucocorticoid hormone cortisol in basal and stressful contexts, which may wear and tear the future capacity of the HPA axis to support adaptive responses to stress, and compromise the activity of other physiological systems over time. This alteration of physiological mechanisms can be captured through a measure of allostatic load which has been previously found to be associated with ACEs (Barboza Solís et al., Reference Barboza Solís, Kelly-Irving, Fantin, Darnaudéry, Torrisani, Lang and Delpierre2015). Recently, a study investigated the association between childhood experiences, allostatic load and multimorbidity (Tomasdottir et al., Reference Tomasdottir, Sigurdsson, Petursson, Kirkengen, Krokstad, McEwen and Getz2015). They found a general, graded association between self-reported childhood difficulties and multimorbidity, on the one hand, and individual disease burden and biological perturbations, on the other.
Another physiological system that could be of interest is inflammation (Breton, Fotso Soh, & Booij, Reference Breton, Fotso Soh and Booij2022). An overactivation of the HPA axis is also associated with inflammation (Slopen, Kubzansky, McLaughlin, & Koenen, Reference Slopen, Kubzansky, McLaughlin and Koenen2013) and changes in immunoinflammatory processes, which may influence an individual's susceptibility to mental disorders (Kramer et al., Reference Kramer, Cosgrove, Dunlap, Subramaniapillai, McIntyre and Suppes2019) and obesity (Pervanidou & Chrousos, Reference Pervanidou and Chrousos2012). Changes in pro-inflammatory markers (e.g. C-reactive protein) observed in obese individuals could have a mediating role in the link between obesity and depressive symptoms (Chu, Cadar, Iob, & Frank, Reference Chu, Cadar, Iob and Frank2023; Daly, Reference Daly2013). These biological mechanisms in the association between ACEs and multimorbidity need to be further explored. In the NCDS58, the biological survey was conducted when cohort members were 45 years, after the last measure of our outcomes, therefore we could not use these data to examine possible biological mechanisms.
Some studies hint to a multimorbidity risk related to childhood experience that is sex-patterned, such as we observed in our findings. In a study of the relation between self-reported childhood quality, biological perturbations and multimorbidity in adulthood, (Tomasdottir et al., Reference Tomasdottir, Sigurdsson, Petursson, Kirkengen, Krokstad, McEwen and Getz2015) reported that introducing age and sex in combination with allostatic load into the model to estimate the risk of multimorbidity, explained part of the relationship. Chandrasekar et al. showed a graded relationship between number of ACEs and multimorbidity in stratified sex samples. Risk estimates were larger for women compared to men (Chandrasekar et al., Reference Chandrasekar, Lacey, Chaturvedi, Hughes, Patalay and Khanolkar2023). Nonetheless, given different samples in stratified analyses, comparisons cannot be made with respect to the relative influence of sex in the studied relationship, such as those explored in our study.
Strengths and limitations
This study contains design limitations, warranting caution when interpreting results. Although cohort retention at each follow-up in the NCDS58 is satisfactory, we cannot exclude selection bias due to attrition and loss to follow-up. This could also have been exacerbated by our initial selection of individuals with no missing data on ACEs, BMI and MI. Indeed, the proportion of individuals who experienced ACEs in our study population is lower compared to those excluded from the initial cohort because of missing data (24.2% v. 30.0%, online Supplementary Table S2) potentially leading to an underestimation of the effect of childhood adversities on comorbid overweight-depression. To allow for uncertainty about the missing data, multiple imputations were used for confounding variables taking the missing at random assumption and we additionally ran all analyses on complete cases i.e. individuals with no missing data for any of the selected characteristics. Another limitation originates in the cohort and period specificities. The most common family of stressors in children from Europe in 1958 could differ from those of relevance nowadays. Characterizing societal characteristics to understand current components of ACEs is important in attempting adapted replicability in other contexts.
Despite these limitations, the data used in this study contains many strengths. We used a longitudinal population-based birth cohort with prospectively measured data across the life span, which reduces the risk of recall bias. As well, exposure-outcome temporal sequencing of events allows to control for reverse causality. Additional analyses showed that results with independent components of the comorbidity's status display similar trends. Additionally, the wealth of detailed data from early life within the cohort allowed us to control for a number of potential confounding factors. Also, the design of our analysis allows for characterization of comorbid overweight-depression in young adult populations which contributes to early prevention knowledge.
Conclusion
This study provides evidence that the risk of comorbid overweight-depression associated to ACEs is larger than the associated risk of overweight or depression conditions separately. Further investigations are needed to understand the mechanisms at play in this relationship and to explore sex-specific differences to extend on the work presented in this study. These results emphasize the importance of challenging the single-disease framework of medical research and health care. Recommendations include reinforcing patient-centered care and continuity of care in multimorbidity, with considerations of psychosocial causes and consequences of disease. Additionally, efforts need to be made to target early life stressors and promote positive, supportive environments during childhood development. Policymakers should endorse supportive learning environments for children and guarantee equitable resource allocation.
Supplementary material
The supplementary material for this article can be found at https://doi.org/10.1017/S0033291723003823
Acknowledgments
We are grateful to The Centre for Longitudinal Studies, UCL Institute of Education for the use of these data and to the UK Data Archive and UK Data Service for making them available.
Funding statement
This study was supported by the Fondation pour la Recherche Médicale grant number ENV202003011543 (Lucile Capuron, Raphaële Castagné). The funder had no role in the study design, analysis, and interpretation of data and in writing the manuscript.
Competing interests
None.
Ethical standards
The authors assert that all procedures contributing to this work comply with the ethical standards of the relevant national and institutional committees on human experimentation and with the Helsinki Declaration of 1975.