4.4 Article

Adverse Childhood Experiences (ACEs) and Internalizing Mental Health, Pain, and Quality of Life in Youth With Chronic Pain: A Longitudinal Examination

Journal

JOURNAL OF PAIN
Volume 22, Issue 10, Pages 1210-1220

Publisher

CHURCHILL LIVINGSTONE
DOI: 10.1016/j.jpain.2021.03.143

Keywords

Adverse childhood experiences; pediatric pain; posttraumatic stress; anxiety; depression

Funding

  1. Vi Riddell Pediatric Pain Initiative
  2. Alberta Children's Hospital Foundation
  3. Alberta Children's Hospital Research Institute
  4. Canadian Institutes of Health Research Strategy for Patient-Oriented Research Chronic Pain Network

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This longitudinal study aimed to identify categories of adverse childhood experiences (ACEs) that increase risk for internalizing mental health problems, pain-related impairment, and poorer quality of life in youth with chronic pain, as well as examine the moderating role of posttraumatic stress symptoms (PTSS) in these associations. The findings showed that ACEs at baseline still have long-lasting impacts on youth with chronic pain, and PTSS moderate the relationship between ACEs and anxiety and depressive symptoms in this population. Assessment of ACEs and PTSS alongside chronic pain is crucial for the comprehensive care of youth in pain.
The aims of this longitudinal study were to 1) identify categories of adverse childhood experiences (ACEs) (ie, neglect, abuse, household dysfunction in childhood) that increase risk for internalizing mental health problems, pain-related impairment, and poorer quality of life and 2) examine the moderating role of posttraumatic stress symptoms (PTSS) in these associations, in a clinical sample of youth with chronic pain. At 2 timepoints, youth (N = 155; aged 10-18 years) completed measures of exposure to ACEs, PTSS, depressive and anxiety symptoms, pain intensity, pain interference, and quality of life. Multivariate analyses of variance, linear mixed modeling, and moderation analyses were conducted. Results from cross-sectional and longitudinal analyses were similar; youth with a history of 3+ ACEs reported significantly higher PTSS, depressive and anxiety symptoms, and poorer quality of life than youth with no ACE history. Results also revealed differences in functioning between youth exposed to different types of ACEs (ie, maltreatment only, household dysfunction only, both, none). Finally, PTSS was found to moderate the association between ACEs and anxiety and depressive symptoms. Findings underscore the influence that ACEs can have on the long-term functioning of youth with chronic pain as well as the important role of current PTSS in this association. Perspective: This study found that the risk of poorer outcomes imposed by ACEs at baseline remains longitudinally and that posttraumatic stress symptoms (PTSS) moderate the relationship between ACEs and anxiety and depressive symptoms in youth with chronic pain. These results underscore the importance of assessing for ACEs and PTSS alongside chronic pain in youth. (C) Published by Elsevier Inc. on behalf of United States Association for the Study of Pain, Inc.

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