Intervening After Trauma: Child-Parent Psychotherapy Treatment Is Associated With Lower Pediatric Epigenetic Age Acceleration

Psychol Sci. 2024 Sep;35(9):1062-1073. doi: 10.1177/09567976241260247. Epub 2024 Aug 14.

Abstract

Early-life adversity increases the risk of health problems. Interventions supporting protective and responsive caregiving offer a promising approach to attenuating adversity-induced changes in stress-sensitive biomarkers. This study tested whether participation in an evidence-based dyadic psychosocial intervention, child-parent psychotherapy (CPP), was related to lower epigenetic age acceleration, a trauma-sensitive biomarker of accelerated biological aging that is associated with later health impairment, in a sample of children with trauma histories. Within this quasi-experimental, repeated-measures study, we examined epigenetic age acceleration at baseline and postintervention in a low-income sample of children receiving CPP treatment (n = 45; age range = 2-6 years; 76% Latino) compared with a weighted, propensity-matched community-comparison sample (n = 110; age range = 3-6 years; 40% Latino). Baseline epigenetic age acceleration was equivalent across groups. However, posttreatment, epigenetic age acceleration in the treatment group was lower than in the matched community sample. Findings highlight the potential for a dyadic psychosocial intervention to ameliorate accelerated biological aging in trauma-exposed children.

Keywords: PedBE; childhood trauma; child–parent psychotherapy; epigenetic age; intervention.

MeSH terms

  • Adverse Childhood Experiences
  • Child
  • Child, Preschool
  • Epigenesis, Genetic*
  • Female
  • Humans
  • Male
  • Parent-Child Relations
  • Parents / psychology
  • Psychotherapy / methods