Childhood or adolescent abuse and primary open-angle glaucoma in a longitudinal cohort of women.
Megan Yu, Hannah H Hwang, Andrea L Roberts, Karestan C Koenen, Janey L Wiggs, Louis R Pasquale, Jae H Kang
Summary
While any childhood/adolescence abuse history was not associated with POAG, the modest adverse associations with early-life sexual abuse history warrant confirmation in future studies.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE
To examine associations of childhood/adolescence abuse with primary open-angle glaucoma (POAG) and POAG subtypes.
METHODS
We included US female nurse participants from the Nurses' Health Study II (1989-2019). Participants (n = 59,712) were ≥40 years old, reported follow-up eye exams, had no glaucoma, and had early-life adverse experience data. Self-reported childhood/adolescence abuse was assessed in 2001 with the Revised Conflict Tactics Scale (CTS) and the 2-item sexual maltreatment scale of the parent-child CTS. We evaluated associations by type (any, physical, sexual) and timing (childhood, adolescence). POAG cases (n = 255) were confirmed and subtyped with medical record review. Multivariable-adjusted Cox proportional hazards models were used to estimate hazard ratios (HRs) and 95% confidence intervals (CIs).
RESULTS
Severe childhood/adolescent abuse was reported by 16.5%. There was no association between any childhood/adolescent abuse (HR 1.03; 95%
CI
0.79-1.35), physical abuse, abuse experienced during childhood only or adolescence only, and POAG risk. Compared to no sexual abuse history, any sexual abuse was modestly associated with POAG (HR 1.31; 95%
CI
1.01-1.69). Specifically, we observed adverse associations with sexual abuse for the POAG subtype with paracentral vs. peripheral VF loss (P = 0.04). For paracentral POAG, we observed a 1.80-fold higher risk (95%
CI
1.14-2.85) with any sexual abuse history, a 2.38-fold higher risk (95%
CI
1.25-4.53) with a threat of/actual forced sexual activity, and a significant dose-response relationship with increasing severity of sexual abuse (P = 0.005; P = 0.045).
CONCLUSIONS
While any childhood/adolescence abuse history was not associated with POAG, the modest adverse associations with early-life sexual abuse history warrant confirmation in future studies.
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Discussion
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