National Institutes of Health/NIEHS Silver Spring, MD, United States
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Iazsmin Bauer Ventura1, Maya Goldberg2, Adam Schiffenbauer3, Min Shi4, Rita Volochayev5, Sharon H. Jackson6, Anna Jansen5, Nastaran Bayat7, Christine Parks8, Clarice R. Weinberg4, Angelo Picardi9, Frederick Miller10 and Lisa Rider3, 1University of Chicago, Chicago, IL, 2National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, MD, 3NIEHS, NIH, Bethesda, MD, 4Biostatitstics & Computational Biology Branch, National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences, National Institutes of Health, Research Triangle Park, NC, 5Environmental Autoimmunity Group, National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, MD, 6National Institute of Dental and Craniofacial Research, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, MD, 7Social Scientific Systems, DLH Holdings Corp, Silver Spring, MD, 8Epidemiology Branch, National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences, National Institutes of Health, Research Triangle Park, NC, 9Centre for Behavioral Sciences and Mental Health, Italian National Institute of Health, Rome, Italy, 10NIH, NIEHS, Chapel Hill, NC
Background/Purpose: Systemic rheumatic diseases (SRDs) are complex multi-organ immune-mediated disorders that arise from the interaction of environmental exposures in genetically predisposed individuals. Stressful life events have been associated with disease flares and progression, but their impact on SRD development is unclear. This study explored the association between life events, psychosocial stress, and the development of SRD in adult and pediatric siblings discordant for SRDs.
Methods: Life events data from the NIEHS Study of Twins or Siblings Discordant for SRDs was examined in 96 Adults, 129 Children (YC, 1-11 years), and 41 Teen (12-17 years) Probands within 5 years of diagnosis of one of four SRDs, and in their same gender unaffected Siblings (SIBs) and Healthy Controls (HCs), within 5 years of Probands' ages. Life events in the year prior to SRD diagnosis were queried using validated questionnaires, adapted from Paykel's List of Recent Life Events for adults and the Adolescent Perceived Event Scale for YC and Teens. Life events were categorized and rated by their associated stress or desirability (Table 1). The same reference period was used for SIBs and HCs. Pediatric questionnaires were completed by parents. Unconditional and conditional logistic regression were used to calculate odds ratios (OR) of SRD diagnosis.
Results: In adults, the number of total, uncontrollable, undesirable, and highly stressful life events was higher in probands compared to HCs (P values < 0.01–0.03), but there was no difference in the frequency of life events between Probands and SIBs. Perceived stress ratings in the same categories were higher in Probands compared to HCs (P-values < 0.01–0.04). In the YC and Teen combined analysis and in the YC group alone, probands had fewer positive and total life events than HCs (P≤0.04). These events were rated as more desirable by YC HCs than by Probands (P≤0.05). From multivariate logistic regression analyses, adjusted for demographics, time from reference date to study enrollment, and smoking, the number of total, major, uncontrollable, undesirable, and highly stressful life events and their corresponding stress ratings were associated with an increased odds of SRD diagnosis in adult Probands compared to HCs (OR 1.22–2.03, P values ≤0.05, Table 2). The frequencies of total, major negative, and major total events were associated with SRD diagnosis in YC and Teens combined (OR 0.69–0.96, P values ≤0.05, Table 3), and in YC alone. However, higher undesirable ratings for major negative life events were associated with SRD diagnosis in children (OR 2.25, P=0.04).
Conclusion: This retrospective study suggests that negative life events and their stress perception are associated with greater odds for SRD in adult Probands compared to HCs. The relationship between life events and SRD diagnosis is more nuanced in the pediatric group, where more frequent life events were associated with a lower odds of SRD, but a greater perception of undesirability with major negative life events was associated with subsequent SRD diagnosis. These findings support the need for better understanding the role of stress in the development of SRD.
Table 1. Life events questionnaires with scoring system and scale ratings by age group.
Table 2. Multivariate logistic regression of the association of stressful life events with systemic rheumatic disease diagnosis in adult Probands (n= 96) compared to Healthy Controls (n=53).
Table 3: Multivariate logistic regression of the association of stressful life events with systemic rheumatic disease diagnosis among pediatric Probands, Siblings, and Healthy Controls.
I. Bauer Ventura: None; M. Goldberg: None; A. Schiffenbauer: Hope, 5; M. Shi: None; R. Volochayev: None; S. H. Jackson: None; A. Jansen: None; N. Bayat: None; C. Parks: None; C. R. Weinberg: None; A. Picardi: None; F. Miller: Argenx, 1, Cabaletta, 1, Pfizer, 2, 2; L. Rider: AstraZeneca, 5, Bristol-Myers Squibb(BMS), 5, Hope Pharmaceuticals, 5.