Childhood Adversities and the ATTACHTM Program’s Influence on Immune Cell Gene Expression
Zhiyuan Yu, Steve Cole, Kharah Ross, Martha Hart, Lubna Anis, Nicole Letourneau

TL;DR
The study found that maternal childhood adversity is linked to increased inflammation in children, but a parenting program can reduce this effect.
Contribution
The ATTACH™ program is shown to moderate the intergenerational impact of maternal ACEs on child inflammation.
Findings
Higher maternal ACEs were associated with higher child inflammatory gene expression.
The ATTACH™ intervention reduced the link between maternal ACEs and child inflammation.
The intervention had no significant effect on maternal inflammation.
Abstract
Objective: To determine whether maternal Adverse Childhood Experiences (ACEs) are (a) associated with increased inflammatory gene expression in mother–child dyads and (b) whether a parenting intervention (ATTACH™) moderates the association between maternal ACEs and mother and/or child inflammatory gene expression. Methods: Twenty mother–child dyads, recruited from a domestic violence shelter in Calgary, AB, Canada, were randomized into an ATTACH™ parenting intervention group (n = 9) or a wait-list control group (n = 11). Maternal ACEs were assessed. The mothers and children each provided one non-fasting blood sample after the intervention group completed the ATTACH™ program, which was assayed to quantify the Conserved Transcriptional Response to Adversity (CTRA) score, indicating inflammatory gene expression profile. Mixed-effect linear models were used, separately in mothers and…
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Taxonomy
TopicsChild Abuse and Trauma · Migration, Health and Trauma · Homelessness and Social Issues
