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Pubertal timing mediates the association between threat adversity and psychopathology

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posted on 2025-04-29, 06:22 authored by Michelle Shaul, Sarah Whittle, Tim SilkTim Silk, Nandi VijayakumarNandi Vijayakumar
Abstract Background Exposure to adversity in childhood is a risk factor for lifetime mental health problems. Altered pace of biological aging, as measured through pubertal timing, is one potential explanatory pathway for this risk. This study examined whether pubertal timing mediated the association between adversity (threat and deprivation) and adolescent mental health problems (internalizing and externalizing), and whether this was moderated by sex. Methods Aims were examined using the Adolescent Brain and Cognitive Development study, a large community sample from the United States. Data were used from three timepoints across the ages of 9–14 years. Latent scores from confirmatory factor analysis operationalized exposure to threat and deprivation. Bayesian mixed-effects regression models tested whether pubertal timing in early adolescence mediated the relationship between adversity exposure and later internalizing and externalizing problems. Sex was examined as a potential moderator of this pathway. Results Both threat and deprivation were associated with later internalizing and externalizing symptoms. Threat, but not deprivation, was associated with earlier pubertal timing, which mediated the association of threat with internalizing and externalizing problems. Sex differences were only observed in the direct association between adversity and internalizing problems, but no such differences were present for mediating pathways. Conclusions Adversity exposure had similar associations with the pace of biological aging (as indexed by pubertal timing) and mental health problems in males and females. However, the association of adversity on pubertal timing appears to depend on the dimension of adversity experienced, with only threat conferring risk of earlier pubertal timing.

History

Related Materials

Location

Cambridge, Eng.

Open access

  • Yes

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Journal

Psychological Medicine

Volume

54

Pagination

3436-3446

ISSN

0033-2917

eISSN

1469-8978

Issue

12

Publisher

Cambridge University Press