Classification of Suicide Attempt Risk Using Environmental and Lifestyle Factors in 3 Large Youth Cohorts

Author:

Visoki Elina12,Moore Tyler M.23,Zhang Xinhe4,Tran Kate T.12,Ly Christina2,Gataviņš Mārtiņš M.12,DiDomenico Grace E.12,Brogan Leah5,Fein Joel A.56,Warrier Varun4,Guloksuz Sinan78,Barzilay Ran123

Affiliation:

1. Department of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia (CHOP), Philadelphia, Pennsylvania

2. Lifespan Brain Institute of CHOP and Penn Medicine, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania

3. Department of Psychiatry, Perelman School of Medicine, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia

4. Cambridge University, Cambridge, United Kingdom

5. Center for Violence Prevention, Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia (CHOP), Philadelphia, Pennsylvania

6. Department of Pediatrics, Perelman School of Medicine, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia

7. Department of Psychiatry and Neuropsychology, School for Mental Health and Neuroscience, Maastricht University Medical Center, Maastricht, the Netherlands

8. Department of Psychiatry, Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven, Connecticut

Abstract

ImportanceSuicide is the third-leading cause of death among US adolescents. Environmental and lifestyle factors influence suicidal behavior and can inform risk classification, yet quantifying and incorporating them in risk assessment presents a significant challenge for reproducibility and clinical translation.ObjectiveTo quantify the aggregate contribution of environmental and lifestyle factors to youth suicide attempt risk classification.Design, Setting, and ParticipantsThis was a cohort study in 3 youth samples: 2 national longitudinal cohorts from the US and the UK and 1 clinical cohort from a tertiary pediatric US hospital. An exposome-wide association study (ExWAS) approach was used to identify risk and protective factors and compute aggregate exposomic scores. Logistic regression models were applied to test associations and model fit of exposomic scores with suicide attempts in independent data. Youth from the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD) study, the UK Millennium Cohort Study (MCS), and the Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia emergency department (CHOP-ED) were included in the study.ExposuresA single-weighted exposomic score that sums significant risk and protective environmental/lifestyle factors.Main Outcome and MeasureSelf-reported suicide attempt.ResultsA total of 40 364 youth were included in this analysis: 11 564 from the ABCD study (3 waves of assessment; mean [SD] age, 12.0 [0.7] years; 6034 male [52.2%]; 344 attempted suicide [3.0%]; 1154 environmental/lifestyle factors were included in the ABCD study), 9000 from the MCS cohort (mean [SD] age, 17.2 [0.3] years; 4593 female [51.0%]; 661 attempted suicide [7.3%]; 2864 environmental/lifestyle factors were included in the MCS cohort), and 19 800 from the CHOP-ED cohort (mean [SD] age, 15.3 [1.5] years; 12 937 female [65.3%]; 2051 attempted suicide [10.4%]; 36 environmental/lifestyle factors were included in the CHOP-ED cohort). In the ABCD discovery subsample, ExWAS identified 99 risk and protective exposures significantly associated with suicide attempt. A single weighted exposomic score that sums significant risk and protective exposures was associated with suicide attempt in an independent ABCD testing subsample (odds ratio [OR], 2.2; 95% CI, 2.0-2.6; P < .001) and explained 17.6% of the variance (based on regression pseudo-R2) in suicide attempt over and above that explained by age, sex, race, and ethnicity (2.8%) and by family history of suicide (6.3%). Findings were consistent in the MCS and CHOP-ED cohorts (explaining 22.6% and 19.3% of the variance in suicide attempt, respectively) despite clinical, demographic, and exposure differences. In all cohorts, compared with youth at the median quintile of the exposomic score, youth at the top fifth quintile were substantially more likely to have made a suicide attempt (OR, 4.3; 95% CI, 2.6-7.2 in the ABCD study; OR, 3.8; 95% CI, 2.7-5.3 in the MCS cohort; OR, 5.8; 95% CI, 4.7-7.1 in the CHOP-ED cohort).Conclusions and RelevanceResults suggest that exposomic scores of suicide attempt provided a generalizable method for risk classification that can be applied in diverse samples from clinical or population settings.

Publisher

American Medical Association (AMA)

Reference46 articles.

Cited by 1 articles. 订阅此论文施引文献 订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献

1. Suizidversuche: Einfluss von Lebensstilfaktoren;DMW - Deutsche Medizinische Wochenschrift;2024-08-29

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