학술논문

Abstract 16913: The Association Between Adverse Childhood Experiences and Physiologic Age as Determined by Artificial Intelligence-ECG
Document Type
Academic Journal
Source
Circulation. Nov 07, 2023 148(Suppl_1 Suppl 1):A16913-A16913
Subject
Language
English
ISSN
0009-7322
Abstract
Background: The gap between electrocardiogram (ECG) artificial intelligence-derived age (ECG-Age) and chronological age (Age-Gap) predicts cardiovascular (CV) comorbidities and mortality reflecting physiologic age. Adverse childhood experiences (ACEs) are traumatic and harmful events that impact adulthood CV outcomes. We hypothesized that ACEs would be associated with physiologic age as determined by the Age-Gap.Methods: We applied a previously validated ECG-Age algorithm to the ECGs of 1,988 consecutive individuals aged ≥18, that within 2 years completed an ACEs questionnaire as part of psychological evaluations for weight management. The ACE questionnaire assesses 3 psychosocial domains (i) childhood abuse (psychological, physical or sexual), (ii) household dysfunction (substance abuse, mental illness, female figure treated violently, criminal behavior and parental separation/divorce) and (iii) neglect (emotional or physical) before age 18; results ranged 0 to 10 and were categorized as burden (0, 1-3, and ≥4) and presence (abuse, household dysfunction, neglect). Age-Gap was operationalized as (≤mean or > mean) positive values reflect physiological aging. Logistic regression analyses tested the association between ACE and Age-Gap.Results: Mean ± SD chronological age was 49±13 yr, ECG-Age 54±12 yr, Age-Gap 4.26±8.95 yr,75% women, average ACE 2±2, 32% experienced 0, 44% 1-3, and 24% ≥4 ACEs. Age-Gap was 1.4 years higher in those who experienced at least 1 ACE. Compared to those who didn’t experience ACE those who faced 1-3 ACE were more likely to have an Age-Gap >mean (OR 1.28 95%CI 1.57-1.04) independent of sex and the age-adjusted Charlson comorbidity index Fig A. Also, they were more prone to experiencing neglect and household dysfunction Fig B.Conclusions: Age-gap was associated with ACEs burden and domains, underscoring the need to identify ACEs during clinical evaluations to prevent ACEs at the individual, family, and community levels.