# Association between childhood maltreatment and adult cortisol concentrations mediated through subjective health complaints

**Authors:** Johanna Klinger-König, Anke Hannemann, Nele Friedrich, Matthias Nauck, Henry Völzke, Hans J. Grabe

PMC · DOI: 10.3389/fepid.2023.1098822 · Frontiers in Epidemiology · 2023-02-17

## TL;DR

Childhood maltreatment is linked to lower adult cortisol levels, partly explained by health complaints and depressive symptoms.

## Contribution

This study identifies subjective health complaints and depressive symptoms as key mediators linking childhood maltreatment to adult cortisol levels.

## Key findings

- Childhood maltreatment's effect on cortisol is partially mediated by depressive symptoms and somatic complaints.
- Combined mediation models show significant overlap between health complaints and depressive symptoms as mediators.
- Health risk behaviors and physical measures did not mediate the relationship between maltreatment and cortisol.

## Abstract

Lower cortisol concentrations in adulthood were repeatedly associated with more severe childhood maltreatment. Additionally, childhood maltreatment was reported to promote health risk behavior, such as smoking or alcohol consumption, and to increase the risk of mental and somatic diseases during adulthood, such as major depressive disorders or obesity. The present study investigated if health risk behavior and disease symptoms in adults mediate the associations between past childhood maltreatment and present basal serum cortisol concentrations.

Data from two independent adult cohorts of the general population-based Study of Health in Pomerania (SHIP-TREND-0: N = 3,517; SHIP-START-2: N = 1,640) was used. Childhood maltreatment was assessed via the Childhood Trauma Questionnaire (CTQ). Cortisol concentrations were measured in single-point serum samples. Health risk behavior and mental and physical symptoms were used as mediators. Mediation analyses were calculated separately for both cohorts; results were integrated via meta-analyses.

In mediator-separated analyses, associations between childhood maltreatment and basal serum cortisol concentrations were partly mediated by depressive symptoms (BDI-II: βindirect effect = -.011, pFDR = .017, 21.0% mediated) and subjective somatic health complaints (somatic complaints: βindirect effect = -.010, pFDR = .005, 19.4% mediated). In the second step, both mediators were simultaneously integrated into one mediation model. The model replicated the mediation effects of the subjective somatic health complaints (whole model: βindirect effect = -.014, p = .001, 27.6% mediated; BDI-II: βindirect effect = -.006, p = .163, 11.4% mediated, somatic complaints: βindirect effect = -.020, p = .020, 15.5% mediated).

The results support the hypothesis that the long-lasting effects of childhood maltreatment on the stress response system are partly mediated through self-perceived disease symptoms. However, no mediation was found for health risk behavior or physically measured mediators. Mediation models with multiple simultaneous mediators pointed to a relevant overlap between the potential mediators. This overlap should be focused on in future studies.

## Linked entities

- **Diseases:** obesity (MONDO:0011122)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** mental and somatic diseases (MESH:D013001), Childhood maltreatment (MESH:D063766), obesity (MESH:D009765), depressive disorders (MESH:D003866), Trauma (MESH:D014947)

## Full text

_Full body text omitted from this summary view._ Fetch the complete paper as Markdown: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC10911021/full.md

## Figures

3 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC10911021/full.md

## References

82 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC10911021/full.md

---
Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC10911021