Childhood adversity has lifelong consequences in the form of poor health in adulthood and premature mortality in that experiencing adverse events before age 18 reliably increases the risk for nine out of 10 leading causes of death in the USA (Hughes et al., Reference Hughes, Bellis, Hardcastle, Sethi, Butchart, Mikton and Dunne2017; Merrick et al., Reference Merrick, Ford, Ports, Guinn, Chen, Klevens and Ottley2019). Health is consistently worse for Black Americans compared to White Americans, including higher rates of the leading causes of death in the USA (Adler & Rehkopf, Reference Adler and Rehkopf2008; Williams, Reference Williams2012). Higher levels of early life adversity may help to explain health disparities between Black and White Americans (Slopen et al., Reference Slopen, Shonkoff, Albert, Yoshikawa, Jacobs, Stoltz and Williams2016). To reduce health disparities, we need to understand the mechanisms that underlie the relationship between early adversity and health outcomes.
Early adversity has been associated with accelerated biological aging (i.e. older than chronological age) as indexed by epigenetic clocks, which are reliable predictors of disease and mortality (Field et al., Reference Field, Robertson, Wang, Havas, Ideker and Adams2018; Horvath & Raj, Reference Horvath and Raj2018). Previous studies have found childhood trauma predicts accelerated epigenetic aging for children and adults (Hamlat et al., Reference Hamlat, Prather, Horvath, Belsky and Epel2021; Sumner, Colich, Uddin, Armstrong, & McLaughlin, Reference Sumner, Colich, Uddin, Armstrong and McLaughlin2019; Wolf et al., Reference Wolf, Maniates, Nugent, Maihofer, Armstrong, Ratanatharathorn and Logue2018; Zannas et al., Reference Zannas, Arloth, Carrillo-Roa, Iurato, Röh, Ressler and Mehta2015). Moreover, early adversity has been associated with other indices of cell aging that predict disease and mortality, including shorter telomere length (TL; Li, He, Wang, Tang, & Chen, Reference Li, He, Wang, Tang and Chen2017) and elevated C-reactive protein (CRP; Baumeister, Akhtar, Ciufolini, Pariante, & Mondelli, Reference Baumeister, Akhtar, Ciufolini, Pariante and Mondelli2016). Childhood adversity predicts shorter TL (Ridout et al., Reference Ridout, Levandowski, Ridout, Gantz, Goonan, Palermo and Tyrka2018); in turn, shorter TL predicts the earlier onset of diseases of aging, such as cardiovascular disease (CVD; D'Mello et al., Reference D'Mello, Ross, Briel, Anand, Gerstein and Paré2015; Haycock et al., Reference Haycock, Heydon, Kaptoge, Butterworth, Thompson and Willeit2014; Willeit et al., Reference Willeit, Raschenberger, Heydon, Tsimikas, Haun, Mayr and Kiechl2014). CRP, an index of systemic inflammation which increases with age and thought to be a mechanism of aging-related disease (Kaptoge et al., Reference Kaptoge, Di Angelantonio, Lowe, Pepys, Thompson, Collins and Danesh2010), has been associated with childhood trauma in meta-analysis (Baumeister et al., Reference Baumeister, Akhtar, Ciufolini, Pariante and Mondelli2016).
Early pubertal timing as accelerated aging
In a risky environment, pubertal maturation may accelerate to increase opportunities to reproduce before the individual dies or becomes compromised, potentially at the expense of investments in adult health and longevity (Belsky, Steinberg, & Draper, Reference Belsky, Steinberg and Draper1991; Ellis, Reference Ellis2004). Early adversity may recalibrate the hypothalamo-pituitary-adrenocortical (HPA) axis, which influences sexual development directly and affects the hypothalamic-pituitary-gonadal axis. Adversity may attenuate HPA-axis function, which results in the earlier onset of adrenal and gonadal hormones and has predicted earlier pubertal development in girls (Saxbe, Negriff, Susman, & Trickett, Reference Saxbe, Negriff, Susman and Trickett2015).
Early pubertal timing has been associated with higher morbidity and earlier mortality (Charalampopoulos, McLoughlin, Elks, & Ong, Reference Charalampopoulos, McLoughlin, Elks and Ong2014) and with accelerated biological aging as indexed by epigenetic clocks (Binder et al., Reference Binder, Corvalan, Mericq, Pereira, Santos, Horvath and Michels2018; Hamlat et al., Reference Hamlat, Prather, Horvath, Belsky and Epel2021; Simpkin et al., Reference Simpkin, Howe, Tilling, Gaunt, Lyttleton, McArdle and Relton2017; Sumner et al., Reference Sumner, Colich, Uddin, Armstrong and McLaughlin2019) and TL (Koss et al., Reference Koss, Schneper, Brooks-Gunn, McLanahan, Mitchell and Notterman2020). In meta-analysis, early adversity was associated with early pubertal timing as well as accelerated cellular aging, as indexed by both epigenetic age and TL (Colich, Rosen, Williams, & McLaughlin, Reference Colich, Rosen, Williams and McLaughlin2020). The possibility that there is an indirect effect of early adversity on health through pubertal timing has rarely been empirically examined. In one study of 73 girls, maternal depression in infancy predicted higher basal cortisol, which predicted accelerated pubertal (adrenarcheal) development, which resulted in health problems at age 18 (Belsky, Ruttle, Boyce, Armstrong, & Essex, Reference Belsky, Ruttle, Boyce, Armstrong and Essex2015). The recalibration of the HPA-axis may also speed up the pace of development (Colich & McLaughlin, Reference Colich and Mclaughlin2022), which would result in earlier pubertal timing and faster aging of physiological systems, more generally, which would be captured in assessments of biological aging.
Multiple biomarkers as an index of biological aging
While a growing number of studies have examined how specific biomarkers may predict health outcomes, few studies have combined biomarkers. Epigenetic aging, TL, and CRP are usually studied independently from one another; however, integrating multiple markers of biological aging may allow for a more complete profile of multisystem-level aging (Liu et al., Reference Liu, Chen, Assimes, Ferrucci, Horvath and Levine2019). Different indices of biological aging are likely to have reciprocal effects on one another regulated by feedback loops (Gassen, Chrousos, Binder, & Zannas, Reference Gassen, Chrousos, Binder and Zannas2017). Given their associations with ELA and interrelationships with one another, epigenetic aging, TL, and elevated CRP may be aggregated and operationalized as a phenotype of biological aging. Each biomarker may represent distinct pathways of aging (Belsky et al., Reference Belsky, Moffitt, Cohen, Corcoran, Levine, Prinz and Caspi2018); their shared variance allows them to be used as indicators of a latent variable.
The current study examines if there is an indirect effect of adversity on such an aggregate composite of accelerated biological aging through pubertal timing. Using structural equation modeling, we created a latent variable of biological aging using epigenetic aging, TL, and CRP as indicators. Structural equation modeling (SEM)s partition variance unique to each indicator into separate residual variance estimates, purifying the structural path coefficients of measurement error, which is partitioned into the indicator-specific residual variances (Kline, Reference Kline2011).
Race differences in aging biomarkers
Race differences in health outcomes are largely due to social determinants and to systemic racism, which is a fundamental cause of racial inequities in health (Churchwell et al., Reference Churchwell, Elkind, Benjamin, Carson, Chang and Lawrence2020; Paradies et al., Reference Paradies, Ben, Denson, Elias, Priest, Pieterse and Gee2015; Phelan & Link, Reference Phelan and Link2015; Williams & Rucker, Reference Williams and Rucker2000; Williams, Lawrence, & Davis, Reference Williams, Lawrence and Davis2019). Systemic racism and related factors that contribute to health disparities between Black and White Americans may engender a phenotype or profile of accelerated aging (Hooten, Pacheco, Smith, & Evans, Reference Hooten, Pacheco, Smith and Evans2022). In one study, by age 30, Black women had a higher allostatic load (i.e. physiological wear on bodily systems due to adaptation to stress; McEwen, Reference McEwen1998) than Black men and White Americans of the same age (Geronimus, Hicken, Keene, & Bound, Reference Geronimus, Hicken, Keene and Bound2006). Although there is variance across studies, evidence supports Black Americans have longer TL than White Americans (Hunt et al., Reference Hunt, Chen, Gardner, Kimura, Srinivasan, Eckfeldt and Aviv2008; Needham et al., Reference Needham, Salerno, Roberts, Boss, Allgood and Mukherjee2019), and that the rate of TL shortening for Blacks may be more rapid than for Whites across time (Rewak et al., Reference Rewak, Buka, Prescott, De Vivo, Loucks, Kawachi and Kubzansky2014). In some studies, by ages 49–55, Black women have shorter TL than White women (Geronimus et al., Reference Geronimus, Hicken, Pearson, Seashols, Brown and Cruz2010). Black adults have larger prospective increases in CRP over time than White adults (Zahodne, Kraal, Zaheed, Farris, & Sol, Reference Zahodne, Kraal, Zaheed, Farris and Sol2019) and Black women have higher CRP levels than Black men and White adults (Khera et al., Reference Khera, McGuire, Murphy, Stanek, Das, Vongpatanasin and de Lemos2005).
There is inconsistent evidence over whether Black Americans have accelerated, decelerated, or equivalent epigenetic aging as compared to White Americans; however, among postmenopausal women, Black women showed accelerated epigenetic aging in comparison to White women (Hamlat et al., Reference Hamlat, Adler, Laraia, Surachman, Lu, Zhang and Epel2022; Horvath et al., Reference Horvath, Gurven, Levine, Trumble, Kaplan, Allayee and Jamieson2016; Liu et al., Reference Liu, Chen, Assimes, Ferrucci, Horvath and Levine2019). In addition to differences in aging biomarkers during adulthood, Black girls experience puberty at significantly younger ages than White girls (Bleil, Booth-LaForce, & Benner, Reference Bleil, Booth-LaForce and Benner2017; Freedman et al., Reference Freedman, Khan, Serdula, Dietz, Srinivasan and Berenson2002), and so demonstrate accelerated aging as indexed by pubertal timing. The current study examined the indirect effect of race (used as a proxy for adversity in the form of systemic racism, which was not directly measured) on accelerated aging through pubertal timing.
The current study
The aims of the current study were to establish there if there was an indirect effect of early adversity on accelerated aging through pubertal timing. The current study makes use of a well-established and well-characterized longitudinal cohort from the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute Growth and Health Study (NGHS; Morrison, Reference Morrison1992) that followed young Black and White girls annually for over a decade starting at ages 9–10. As meta-analysis has concluded that specifically adversity characterized as abuse/threat in early life is related to earlier pubertal development (Colich et al., Reference Colich, Rosen, Williams and McLaughlin2020; Sumner et al., Reference Sumner, Colich, Uddin, Armstrong and McLaughlin2019), we operationalized childhood adversity as abuse/threat. We also examined the indirect effect of race on accelerated aging through pubertal timing. To operationalize both early adversity and accelerated aging, we created two latent variables for the respective constructs using SEM. We used three indicators of abuse/threat to construct a latent variable of early life adversity (general abuse/threat before age 13, sexual abuse, and physical abuse). To operationalize accelerated aging, we created a latent variable using the indicators of epigenetic aging, TL, and CRP.
Methods and materials
Participants and procedure
The National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute Growth and Health Study (NGHS) (1992) assessed Black and White girls annually for 10 years and re-recruited them as adults in early middle age. The initial aims were to track cardiovascular risk factors and other health-related variables annually from childhood through young adulthood in self-identified Black and White girls from Richmond (CA, USA), Cincinnati (OH, USA), and Washington (D.C, USA). In 1987–1988, the NGHS Contra Costa County cohort (887 girls) was recruited at ages 9 and 10 from public and parochial schools in the Richmond Unified School District area. Retention across the 10-year study period was 89%. More details about the initial study sample are available (NGHS, 1992).
In 2016, a follow-up study of the NGHS Contra Costa County cohort was initiated to assess health and well-being in midlife. Over 73% of eligible women (307 Black and 317 White) were enrolled in the follow-up study. Eligibility criteria for the follow-up study included: (1) being an original NGHS participant; (2) not pregnant at the time of recruitment, and had not experienced a pregnancy, miscarriage, or abortion within the last 3 months; and (3) not living abroad, nor incarcerated or otherwise institutionalized. Multiple recruitment strategies were used to re-recruit original NGHS participants from the Richmond site, including mailing and telephone follow-up, social media and electronic outreach, and door-to-door outreach. Eligible participants provided written informed consent and participated in (1) a baseline survey and (2) a home/clinic visit, including blood and saliva collection for biomarker assessment. This study was approved by the local Institutional Review Board.
The sample for the current study consisted of 385 participants (187 Black, 198 White, M age = 39.4, s.d.age = 1.2), who provided blood or saliva samples as part of the follow-up study. The 498 girls who were part of the original NGHS study, but who were not part of the current study, did not significantly differ in race, χ2(1, 883) = 2.39, p = 0.12, childhood income, χ2(1, 837) = 0.03, p = 0.87, or age at menarche, t(833) = 0.37, p = 0.71, from the 385 women of the current study.
Early life adversity
Early adversity was measured via a latent construct combining three measures (general abuse, sexual, and physical abuse) as described below. Creating a latent variable of adversity minimizes measurement error and allowed us to focus on the variance shared between the two measures.
General threat/abuse. The Stress and Adversity Inventory (STRAIN, Slavich & Shields, Reference Slavich and Shields2018) was used to retrospectively measure the number of abuse/threat events before age 13. The STRAIN reliably assesses a person's cumulative exposure to stress over the life course by systematically inquiring about a diverse array of acute life events and chronic difficulties. The STRAIN is widely used for the assessment of both retrospective and prospective life events. Cumulative stress exposure assessed with the STRAIN has been linked to poor metabolic health and mental health in young adulthood (Toussaint, Shields, Dorn, & Slavich, Reference Toussaint, Shields, Dorn and Slavich2016). The general abuse/threat variable included stressors involving emotional abuse, sexual abuse, physical abuse, and prolonged harsh parental discipline. Respondents were also asked at what age the stressor occurred. The abuse/threat variable represented the total events that occurred during the ages of 0–12 years old.
Physical abuse and sexual abuse. Adapted from Felitti et al., (Reference Felitti, Anda, Nordenberg, Williamson, Spitz, Edwards and Marks1998), participants were asked if they had experienced physical abuse or sexual abuse. The physical abuse and sexual abuse variables represented if abuse before age 18 was endorsed.
Pubertal timing
Menarche. During the initial NGHS study, each year from baseline (ages 9/10) for 10 years, participants self-reported age at menarche. When there were multiple reports of age at menarche, the average of all reports was used.
Accelerated aging
Epigenetic age acceleration (GrimAge). DNA methylation analyses with saliva samples were performed at the Semel Institute UCLA Neurosciences Genomics Core (UNGC) using the Illumina Infinium HumanMethylation450 BeadChip (Illumina, Inc.). Genomic DNA was isolated using temperature denaturation and subjected to bisulfite conversion, PCR amplification, and DNA sequencing (EZ DNA Methylation-Gold Kit, Zymo Research, Tustin, California, USA). Methylation profiles were input to Horvath's online calculator https://dnamage.genetics.ucla.edu/, which automatically imputes any missing CpGs. After selection of the advanced analysis option and normalization based on the BMIQ method (Teschendorff et al., Reference Teschendorff, Marabita, Lechner, Bartlett, Tegner, Gomez-Cabrero and Beck2013), the output files contain the estimated epigenetic age of each participant and measures of predictive accuracy and data quality (e.g. for identifying array outliers, ‘corSampleVSgoldstandard’). Before data analysis began, participants (n = 26) were excluded due to quality control issues.
DNAm GrimAgeFootnote †Footnote 1 is based on 1030 unique CpGs that robustly predict mortality as well as age-related conditions such as CVD (Li et al., Reference Li, Ploner, Wang, Magnusson, Reynolds, Finkel and Hägg2020; Lu et al., Reference Lu, Quach, Wilson, Reiner, Aviv, Raj and Whitsel2019). We used the recent optimized version of GrimAge which uses new DNAm estimators of plasma proteins: high sensitivity CRP and hemoglobin A1C (Lu et al., Reference Lu, Quach, Wilson, Reiner, Aviv, Raj and Whitsel2019). ‘AgeAccelerationResidual’, the residual resulting from a linear model where DNAm age is regressed on chronological age, was the outcome variable. Positive residual values reflected an individual being older biologically than chronological age and negative residual values reflected the reverse.
Telomere length measurement. Genomic DNA was extracted from 500 μl of saliva collected in the Oragene DNA kit (cat# OG-500, DNA Genotek Inc. Kanata, Ontario, Canada) with the DNA Agencourt DNAdvance kit (cat# A48705, Beckman Coulter Genomics Inc. Brea CA). DNA was stored at −80 °C and TL assays were performed between May and June of 2020. DNA was quantified by measuring OD260 with a NanoDrop 2000c Spectrophotometer (Nanodrop Products, Wilmington, DE, USA) and ran on 0.8% agarose gels to check DNA integrity. Samples that passed the quality control of OD260/OD280 between 1.7 and 2.0, concentration greater than 10 ng/μl and no degradation were used for TL measurement. Five samples had concentration lower than 10 ng/μl and nine samples were degraded.
The TL measurement assay was adapted from the published original method by Cawthon (Cawthon, Reference Cawthon2002; Lin et al., Reference Lin, Epel, Cheon, Kroenke, Sinclair, Bigos and Blackburn2010). After applying Dixon's Q test to remove outliners, the average concentrations of T and S from the triplicate wells were used to calculate the T/S ratios. T/S ratio for each sample was measured twice. When the duplicate T/S value and the initial value varied by more than 7%, the sample was run the third time and the two closest values were reported. 26% samples were run a third time. The coefficient of variation for this study was 2.2 ± 1.6%. The PCR efficiencies for the T and S reactions were 92.9 ± 2.5% and 95.2 ± 2.4% respectively. DNA extraction and TL assays for the entire study were performed using the same lots of reagents. Lab personnel who performed the assays were provided with de-identified samples and were blind to all demographic and clinical data. The intra-class correlation TL values from duplicate DNA extraction from 48 randomly selected samples from the same cohort is 0.95 (CI 0.911–0.972).
C-reactive protein (CRP). High-sensitivity CRP assays were performed by LabCorp (test 120766, CPT 86141). Adult participants had a fasting blood draw in the morning after a 10 h fast at local labs. Blood was collected into a green-top (heparin) tube, and sent to the nearest LabCorp assay lab, which in most cases was local to Richmond, CA. LabCorp has a strictly followed standardized automated protocol, certified by CLIA (Clinical Laboratory Improvement Amendments), and used nationally in each of their labs. The blood was separated into serum from cells within 1 h of drawing. A standard clinically used assay (immunochemiluminometric assay, ICMA on the Integra 800) was used.
Data analysis
To operationalize early adversity, we used three indicators of general abuse/threat before age 13, sexual abuse, and physical abuse to construct a latent variable. We used the three indicators of DNAm GrimAge, TL, and CRP to construct the latent variable of accelerated aging. The early adversity, menarche, and accelerated aging variables were regressed on race (Black = 1, White = 0). Annual income in childhood was regressed on adversity, age at menarche and accelerated aging. Age and current income were regressed on accelerated aging. The (a) direct and indirect (through age at menarche) effects of early adversity on accelerated aging as well as the (b) direct and indirect (through age at menarche) effects of race on accelerated aging were examined (Fig. 1). Global model fit was assessed using the robust χ2 test of exact model fit. Because the χ2 test may be sensitive to trivial amounts of data-model misfit in moderate to large samples (Browne & Cudeck, Reference Browne, Cudeck, Bollen and Long1993), we also assessed model fit using the following approximate fit indices: Bentler's comparative fit index (CFI), the root mean square error of approximation (RMSEA), and the standardized root mean square residuals (SRMR). Satisfactory model fit was determined by Hu and Bentler's (Reference Hu and Bentler1999) recommended two-index strategy of either (a) CFI ⩾0.95 and SRMR ⩽0.08 or (b) RMSEA ⩽0.06 and SRMR ⩽0.08. Inferences for direct and indirect effects were based on the unstandardized regression estimates b and their 95% confidence intervals (CIs), with the latter computed via the non-parametric bias-corrected bootstrap based on 5000 replicate samples (MacKinnon, Lockwood, & Williams, Reference MacKinnon, Lockwood and Williams2004). Descriptive statistics were computed using SPSS version 28.0; latent variable models were fitted using Mplus version 8.7 (Muthén & Muthén, Reference Muthén and Muthén2017).
Results
Descriptive statistics are reported in Table 1 and correlations are reported in Table 2. Between Black and White women, there was no difference in the number of abuse or threat-related events before age 13 or number of sexual abuse experiences before age 18. White women (M = 1.30, s.d. = 0.46) reported significantly more experiences of physical abuse before 18 than Black women (M = 1.18, s.d. = 0.38). As expected, Black women were significantly younger at first menstruation, with a mean age at menarche of 11.96 years (s.d. = 1.22) compared to 12.47 years (s.d. = 1.23) for White women (Table 3).
Note: *p < 0.05; **p < 0.01; ***p < 0.001.
Note: Childhood income was categorized as less than $20 000/year or $20 000/year or more. Current income was categorized as less than $60 000/year or $60 000/year or more. *p < 0.05; **p < 0.01; ***p < 0.001.
Note: Confidence intervals (CI) were generated via the non-parametric bias-corrected bootstrap based on 5000 replicate samples. Childhood income was categorized as less than $20 000/year or $20 000/year or more. Current income was categorized as less than $60 000/year or $60 000/year or more.
Relative to Black women, White women were significantly more likely to have current annual incomes of at least $60 000 (68.7% v. 38.5%) and to have had household incomes of at least $20 000 annually when aged 9 or 10 (78.8% v. 43.9%).Footnote 2 Black women had significantly higher epigenetic age acceleration (epigenetic age relative to chronological age) than White women. On average, Black women were epigenetically older, 1.24 (5.07), than chronological age and White women were younger, −1.29 (4.83), than chronological age. Black women had significantly higher CRP than White women with a mean of 3.95 (4.17) mg/L compared to 2.69 (3.34) mg/L for White women. Black women had significantly longer TL with a mean T/S ratio of 1.25 (0.27) compared to 1.15 (0.26) for White women.
Model of early abuse and accelerated aging
Model fit was satisfactory: χ2(36) = 63.85, p = 0.001; CFI = .90; RMSEA = 0.05 (95% CI 0.03–0.07), SRMR = 0.04. The observed variables of early adversity (abuse before age 13, physical abuse, and sexual abuse) and accelerated aging (epigenetic age acceleration, CRP, and TL) loaded significantly onto their appropriate latent variables of adversity and accelerated aging, respectively (Fig. 1).
Race was not significantly associated with early adversity (b = −0.14, 95% CI −0.30 to 0.02, β = −0.24). Race was significantly associated with age at menarche (b = −0.62, 95% CI −0.90 to −0.34, β = −0.49), and with accelerated aging (b =1.50, 95% CI 0.51–2.61, β = 0.54), in that Black women had a younger age at menarche and higher accelerated aging. Childhood income was significantly negatively associated with accelerated aging (b = −1.22, 95% CI −2.47 to −0.05, β = −0.44), but not with early adversity (b = −0.06, 95% CI −0.22 to 0.12, β = −0.10), or age at menarche (b = −0.16, 95% CI −0.45 to 0.11, β = −0.13). Current income was significantly negatively associated with accelerated aging (b = −1.35, 95% CI −2.04 to −0.50, β = −0.49).
Early adversity was significantly negatively associated with age at menarche (b = −0.46, 95% CI −0.75 to −0.20, β = −0.21) and age at menarche was significantly negatively associated with accelerated aging (b = −0.40, 95% CI −0.73 to −0.04, β = −0.18), in that higher adversity was related to younger age at menarche and younger age at menarche was related to higher accelerated aging. There was a significant positive indirect effect of early abuse on accelerated aging through age at menarche (b = 0.19, 95% CI 0.03–0.44, β = 0.04), in that woman who experienced more abuse were younger at menarche, which was associated with greater accelerated aging. The direct association between adversity and accelerated aging was not significant (b = −0.31, 95% CI −1.33 to 0.91, β = −0.06). There was also a significant positive indirect effect of race on accelerated aging through age at menarche (b = 0.25, 95% CI 0.04–0.52, β = 0.09), in that Black women were younger at menarche, which was associated with greater accelerated aging.
Discussion
In the current study, adversity in childhood was associated with an earlier age of first menstruation (i.e. menarche), which was in turn associated with accelerated biological aging in mid-life for both Black and White women. As theorized, there was an indirect effect of childhood adversity on accelerated biological aging through age at menarche. Further, Black women had an earlier age at menarche and greater accelerated aging in comparison to White women and there was an indirect effect of race on accelerated aging through age at menarche. Accelerated biological aging may begin in childhood (i.e. early pubertal timing may be a form of accelerated aging) and the accelerated aging process set in motion by abuse during childhood. In line with the biological embedding model (Ehrlich, Ross, Chen, & Miller, Reference Ehrlich, Ross, Chen and Miller2016; Miller, Chen, & Parker, Reference Miller, Chen and Parker2011), adversity may act through epigenetic changes, inflammation, and other biological processes to accelerate biological aging (Finkel & Holbrook, Reference Finkel and Holbrook2000).
Results suggest women who experienced abuse in childhood may mature earlier and present as biologically older in adulthood than same-age peers. Findings align with work showing that both early abuse and earlier age at menarche were associated with faster epigenetic age acceleration (Hamlat et al., Reference Hamlat, Prather, Horvath, Belsky and Epel2021). Black women demonstrated another path of vulnerability by which earlier age at menarche resulted in accelerated biological aging. Along with a younger age at menarche, Black women had greater accelerated aging compared to White women, including higher levels of CRP and faster epigenetic age acceleration. There was no difference in early life adversity, as assessed by a composite of three abuse variables, between Black and White women. Race is a proxy for systemic racism (which was not directly captured in the current study), which is a fundamental cause of racial inequities in health (Phelan & Link, Reference Phelan and Link2015; Williams et al., Reference Williams, Lawrence and Davis2019). Black women may ‘weather’ or experience greater biological aging due to race-related stressors (Geronimus, Reference Geronimus1992), and weathering may begin to influence aging-related biomarkers beginning in childhood. Black girls experience pubertal onset at significantly younger ages than White girls (Bleil et al., Reference Bleil, Booth-LaForce and Benner2017; Freedman et al., Reference Freedman, Khan, Serdula, Dietz, Srinivasan and Berenson2002) and so demonstrate accelerated aging as indexed by pubertal timing, which may contribute to health disparities between Black and White women in later life.
The current study provides support for the psychosocial acceleration hypothesis, which holds that in an early environment characterized by high adversity, pubertal maturation may accelerate to maximize opportunities for reproduction. The focus of resources on the acceleration of puberty may be at the expense of investments for adult health and lead to premature aging decades before the development of serious disease and dysfunction. Taken together, study findings support that early pubertal timing and accelerated biological aging represent similar evolutionary-developmental processes (Belsky, Reference Belsky2019; Belsky & Shalev, Reference Belsky and Shalev2016) and that early puberty may be conceptualized as accelerated aging that begins in childhood.
Accelerated biological aging may serve as a mechanism by which early adversity contributes to health disparities, and girls who experience early adversity, especially Black girls, may benefit from intervention. Puberty is a sensitive period for recalibration of the HPA axis in children who have experienced early life adversity (Gunnar, DePasquale, Reid, & Donzella, Reference Gunnar, DePasquale, Reid and Donzella2019). Intervention during the pubertal transition could protect against accelerated aging and lead to healthier outcomes during adulthood. For example, supportive family environments have been found to buffer against further epigenetic age acceleration for Black youth experiencing high levels of racial discrimination (Brody, Miller, Yu, Beach, & Chen, Reference Brody, Miller, Yu, Beach and Chen2016).
Strengths and limitations
The current study has notable strengths including a sufficiently large sample of Black and White women to examine the indirect effects of early adversity on accelerated biological aging through age at menarche. Secondly, this is the first study to utilize an accelerated aging latent variable using CRP, epigenetic clocks, and TL to investigate the relationship between early adversity and biological aging.Footnote 3 Thirdly, we also used multiple measures of early adversity to construct a latent variable, which included abuse before age 13 as well as childhood physical and sexual abuse. To better isolate effects of early abuse, we also included a measure of early financial adversity (household income in childhood) as a covariate. Finally, examining biological aging as an outcome in midlife allows us to evaluate the influence of early adversity on biological aging decades before the onset of major disease or disability.
Study results should be considered within the context of several limitations. For one, adversity that took place in childhood was assessed retrospectively in adulthood. The accuracy of retrospective recall of childhood experiences should not be assumed (Hardt & Rutter, Reference Hardt and Rutter2004; Reuben et al., Reference Reuben, Moffitt, Caspi, Belsky, Harrington, Schroeder and Danese2016); however, retrospective report of maltreatment is practical with an adult sample (Baldwin, Reuben, Newbury, & Danese, Reference Baldwin, Reuben, Newbury and Danese2019; Newbury et al., Reference Newbury, Arseneault, Moffitt, Caspi, Danese, Baldwin and Fisher2018). Secondly, the current study evaluated the associations between early adversity, age at menarche, and accelerated biological aging in Black and White women and did not include men. Future studies should examine similar associations in both men and women of other racial and ethnic backgrounds. For instance, children in disadvantaged neighborhoods and those with advance pubertal development had faster pace of biological aging as measured by DunedinPoAm,Footnote 4 and Latinx-identifying children had a faster pace of aging than White children (Raffington et al., Reference Raffington, Belsky, Kothari, Malanchini, Tucker-Drob and Harden2021). Thirdly, our research did not have multiple assessments of biological aging. Prospective research should evaluate the effects of early adversity and age of menarche on longitudinal changes of biological aging across the lifespan. Our research did not have multiple assessments of biological aging. Prospective research should evaluate the effects of early adversity and age of menarche on longitudinal changes of biological aging across the lifespan. Finally, in the current study, the direct effect of adversity on aging was not significant. An indirect effect may be statistically significant when the total or direct effect is not significant, and the significance of the total effect should not be used as a requirement for mediation (Fritz, Cox, & MacKinnon, Reference Fritz, Cox and MacKinnon2015; Hayes, Reference Hayes2009; Kenny & Judd, Reference Kenny and Judd2014; O'Rourke & MacKinnon, Reference O'Rourke and MacKinnon2015).
Acknowledgements
This research was supported by the National Institute of Mental Health grant 5T32MH019391, National Institute on Aging grant 1R01AG059677 to E. S. E., National Institute on Aging diversity supplement (R01AG059677; PI: Epel) to E. J. H, and the National Institute of Child Health and Human Development grant 1R01HD073568 to B. L. This work was supported by the National Institute on Aging for the National Institutes of Health under grant number P30AG015272 (University of California San Francisco, Center for Aging in Diverse Communities). The content is solely the responsibility of the authors and does not necessarily represent the official views of the National Institutes of Health.
Competing interests
Elissa J. Hamlat, Torsten B. Neilands, Barbara Laraia, Joshua Zhang, Ake T. Lu, Jue Lin, Steve Horvath, and Elissa S. Epel reported no biomedical financial interests or potential conflicts of interest.
Supplementary material
The supplementary material for this article can be found at https://doi.org/10.1017/S0033291723001629