lancet-header

Preprints with The Lancet is a collaboration between The Lancet Group of journals and SSRN to facilitate the open sharing of preprints for early engagement, community comment, and collaboration. Preprints available here are not Lancet publications or necessarily under review with a Lancet journal. These preprints are early-stage research papers that have not been peer-reviewed. The usual SSRN checks and a Lancet-specific check for appropriateness and transparency have been applied. The findings should not be used for clinical or public health decision-making or presented without highlighting these facts. For more information, please see the FAQs.

What Do Four Decades of Research Tell Us About the Association between Childhood Adversity and Psychosis: An Updated and Extended Multi-Level Meta-Analysis

40 Pages Posted: 3 May 2024

See all articles by Lan Zhou

Lan Zhou

University of Groningen - University Medical Center Groningen

Iris E. Sommer

University of Groningen - Department of Biomedical Sciences of Cells & Systems

Pengyuan Yang

Ghent University

Lev Sikirin

University of Groningen - University Medical Center Groningen

Jim van Os

Maastricht University - Department of Psychiatry and Psychology, School of Mental Health and Neuroscience

Richard P. Bentall

University of Sheffield

Filippo Varese

The University of Manchester - Manchester University NHS Foundation Trust

Marieke J.H. Begemann

University of Groningen - Department of Biomedical Sciences of Cells & Systems

More...

Abstract

Background: A 2012 meta-analysis found that patients with psychosis are almost three times more likely to have been exposed to childhood adversity than controls. Additional studies have been rapidly accumulating for more than a decade. We address the urgent need for an updated evidence synthesis, but also expand the available evidence by investigating a broad array of adversity subtypes and exploring sex and the age of psychosis onset as relevant factors. 

Methods: Following PRISMA guidelines, we searched PubMed, EMBASE, PsycINFO, Web of Science, WANFANG, and China National Knowledge Internet, for case-control studies (adversity in patients vs. controls, or psychotic symptoms in adversity-exposed vs. non-exposed individuals), cross-sectional and cohort studies on the association between adversity and psychotic symptoms/illness. Multi-level meta-analyses, meta-regressions, and study quality assessments were conducted. PROSPERO registration number: CRD42022310002. 

Findings: The main analysis included 183 study samples (N=349 265), with 119 case-control studies (15 186 cases; 14 879 controls), 51 cross-sectional studies (N=299 659), and 13 cohort studies (N=19 541). Significant associations between adversity and psychosis were observed across all study designs, yielding an overall OR of 2·80 (2·18–3·60). Secondary analyses revealed that exposure to each adversity subtype increased the odds of psychosis, with the highest OR of 3·54 (3·04–4·13) for emotional abuse, and the lowest OR of 1·58 (1·48–1·68) for parental antipathy. No statistically significant sex differences were observed, although the OR for sexual abuse was higher for women. Onset of psychosis was earlier in adversity-exposed vs. unexposed individuals (mean difference=-0·79 years, 95%CI -1·47 to -0·12). 

Interpretation: This is the largest meta-analysis to date on the association between childhood adversity and psychosis, confirming but significantly expanding on past findings. The results have broad clinical implications, as they highlight the need for primary prevention of exposure to early adversities and the implementation of trauma-informed and trauma-focused therapies in the treatment of psychosis.

Funding: None.

Declaration of Interest: The authors have declared that there are no conflicts of interest in relation to the subject of this study.

Keywords: childhood adversity, childhood trauma, schizophrenia, psychosis, psychotic symptoms, sex differences, age of psychosis onset, meta-analysis

Suggested Citation

Zhou, Lan and Sommer, Iris E. and Yang, Pengyuan and Sikirin, Lev and van Os, Jim and Bentall, Richard P. and Varese, Filippo and Begemann, Marieke J.H., What Do Four Decades of Research Tell Us About the Association between Childhood Adversity and Psychosis: An Updated and Extended Multi-Level Meta-Analysis. Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=4813693 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.4813693

Lan Zhou (Contact Author)

University of Groningen - University Medical Center Groningen ( email )

Iris E. Sommer

University of Groningen - Department of Biomedical Sciences of Cells & Systems ( email )

Groningen
Netherlands

Pengyuan Yang

Ghent University ( email )

Coupure Links 653
Ghent, 9000
Belgium

Lev Sikirin

University of Groningen - University Medical Center Groningen ( email )

Jim Van Os

Maastricht University - Department of Psychiatry and Psychology, School of Mental Health and Neuroscience ( email )

Richard P. Bentall

University of Sheffield ( email )

17 Mappin Street
Sheffield, Sheffield S1 4DT
United Kingdom

Filippo Varese

The University of Manchester - Manchester University NHS Foundation Trust ( email )

Oxford Road
Manchester, M13 9PL
United Kingdom

Marieke J.H. Begemann

University of Groningen - Department of Biomedical Sciences of Cells & Systems ( email )

Click here to go to TheLancet.com

Paper statistics

Downloads
218
Abstract Views
753
PlumX Metrics