36 research outputs found

    Characterizing the Role of Different Childhood Trauma Subtypes in the Neuroendocrine Functioning of Youth: Implications for Adolescent Depression.

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    Many depressed youth have been exposed to trauma, and these youth are less responsive to standard depression treatments. This suggests that the mechanisms for the development and maintenance of depression in individuals with a history of childhood trauma may differ from those without, however these mechanisms are poorly understood. One neurobiological mechanism associated with the onset, course, and recurrence of depression is functioning of the HPA-axis. The purpose of this study was to characterize the interplay between exposure to childhood trauma and HPA-axis functioning and integrate this interplay into our understanding of adolescent depression. METHODS: Participants in this study were a community sample of 138 youth (aged 9-16). All youth completed a semi-structured diagnostic interview, a standardized laboratory stress protocol, and the SE-CPT. Each participant contributed 2 pre-stress and 5 post-stress salivary cortisol samples, as well as 4 diurnal salivary cortisol samples at home across 2 consecutive weekdays. All parents completed a semi-structured diagnostic interview, the ETI, and the CDI. RESULTS: We found that more reported exposure to general trauma was associated with greater cortisol awakening response and elevated cortisol at bedtime, physical abuse exposure was associated with faster reactivity to acute stress, and emotional abuse was associated with delayed down-regulation of cortisol following acute stress. Additionally, we found that high reported emotional abuse beginning during the school-aged years was associated with elevated diurnal cortisol throughout the day, while the HPA-axis may be more sensitive to physical abuse exposure during early childhood. Youth with a history of exposure to general trauma who also have depression demonstrate elevated cortisol at bedtime, as well as hypersensitivity to novel settings. DISCUSSION: Our findings convey the importance of research incorporating multiple indices of HPA-axis functioning to inform our understanding of stress reactivity. Furthermore, these findings demonstrate that different forms of childhood stress may influence the neurobiological system in different ways across development. Ultimately, depressed youth with a history of reported trauma exposure demonstrated distinct patterns of neuroendocrine dysregulation compared with other youth. Overall, this dissertation presents a comprehensive examination of neuroendocrine functioning in youth in the context of childhood trauma exposure and psychopathology.PhDPsychologyUniversity of Michigan, Horace H. Rackham School of Graduate Studieshttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/107089/1/katerk_1.pd

    Childhood maltreatment, psychological resources, and depressive symptoms in women with breast cancer.

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    Childhood maltreatment is associated with elevated risk for depression across the human lifespan. Identifying the pathways through which childhood maltreatment relates to depressive symptoms may elucidate intervention targets that have the potential to reduce the lifelong negative health sequelae of maltreatment exposure. In this cross-sectional study, 271 women with early-stage breast cancer were assessed after their diagnosis but before the start of adjuvant treatment (chemotherapy, radiation, endocrine therapy). Participants completed measures of childhood maltreatment exposure, psychological resources (optimism, mastery, self-esteem, mindfulness), and depressive symptoms. Using multiple mediation analyses, we examined which psychological resources uniquely mediated the relationship between childhood maltreatment and depressive symptoms. Exposure to maltreatment during childhood was robustly associated with lower psychological resources and elevated depressive symptoms. Further, lower optimism and mindfulness mediated the association between childhood maltreatment and elevated depressive symptoms. These results support existing theory that childhood maltreatment is associated with lower psychological resources, which partially explains elevated depressive symptoms in a sample of women facing breast cancer diagnosis and treatment. These findings warrant replication in populations facing other major life events and highlight the need for additional studies examining childhood maltreatment as a moderator of treatment outcomes

    Tumor Biology and Immune Infiltration Define Primary Liver Cancer Subsets Linked to Overall Survival After Immunotherapy

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    Primary liver cancer is a rising cause of cancer deaths in the US. Although immunotherapy with immune checkpoint inhibitors induces a potent response in a subset of patients, response rates vary among individuals. Predicting which patients will respond to immune checkpoint inhibitors is of great interest in the field. In a retrospective arm of the National Cancer Institute Cancers of the Liver: Accelerating Research of Immunotherapy by a Transdisciplinary Network (NCI-CLARITY) study, we use archived formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded samples to profile the transcriptome and genomic alterations among 86 hepatocellular carcinoma and cholangiocarcinoma patients prior to and following immune checkpoint inhibitor treatment. Using supervised and unsupervised approaches, we identify stable molecular subtypes linked to overall survival and distinguished by two axes of aggressive tumor biology and microenvironmental features. Moreover, molecular responses to immune checkpoint inhibitor treatment differ between subtypes. Thus, patients with heterogeneous liver cancer may be stratified by molecular status indicative of treatment response to immune checkpoint inhibitors
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