Biology of Sex Differences
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Preprints posted in the last 7 days, ranked by how well they match Biology of Sex Differences's content profile, based on 29 papers previously published here. The average preprint has a 0.02% match score for this journal, so anything above that is already an above-average fit.
Houghton, A.; Caola, L.; Dastin-Van Rijn, E.; Anderson, S.; Kummerfeld, E.; Sullivan, C.; Simpson, S.; Kalkar, A.; Banerjee, R.; Fiecas, M.; Randolph, A.
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Background: Prenatal substance exposure (PSE) occurs when an individual is exposed to substances in utero. PSEs may have lasting effects on mental health. We tested whether PSEs show threshold, cumulative, or individual substance associations with childhood psychiatric diagnoses. Methods: Clinical variables (demographics, ICD-9/10 diagnoses, PSE history) were extracted from electronic health records from the University of Minnesota Adoption Medicine Clinic. PSEs were identified from caregiver and child-protective-services narratives and/or toxicology (cord tissue/blood, meconium). For each ICD-9/10 diagnostic category, we fit logistic regression models comparing (1) exposure thresholds (0, 1, 2, 3, 4+ exposures), (2) a cumulative exposure count, and (3) individual substances to estimate marginal odds ratios (ORs) with 95% Confidence Intervals (CIs). Results: Psychiatric diagnoses increased with the number of PSEs. Relative to no exposure, odds of an Anxiety Disorder rose from OR 1.47 (95% CI 1.16-1.87) with one exposure to OR 2.03 (1.64-2.52) with >=4 exposures. Higher cumulative exposure scores were associated with Anxiety Disorders (OR 1.28, 1.18-1.38), Behavioral and Emotional Disorders (OR 1.42, 1.31-1.54), Substance Use Disorders (OR 1.52, 1.29-1.79), and Mood Disorders (OR 1.16, 1.04-1.30). Alcohol, tobacco, and marijuana exposures were associated with increased odds of at least one psychiatric diagnosis, and each substance showed at least one significant diagnostic cluster when modeled independently. Conclusion: Increasing numbers of PSEs were associated with higher odds of psychiatric diagnoses, with patterns varying by substance and outcome. These findings motivate research on exposure timing and combinations to support earlier identification and intervention for at-risk children.
Ejaz, M.; Ahmed, A.; Rizvi, S. H.; Rizvi, A. A.; Ali, F.; Haroon, A.
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Background: Sexual and gender minorities (SGM), including men who have sex with men (MSM) and transgender women, often face stigma, legal constraints, and limited access to sexual and reproductive health services. These conditions restrict prevention and care, increasing vulnerability to HIV and human papillomavirus (HPV) infections. While strong HIV-HPV interaction is documented in high-income settings, evidence from low- and middle-income countries remains limited. This study examines the burden, co-infection dynamics, and progression of HPV infection and anal dysplasia among MSM and transgender women in Pakistan. Methods: A cross-sectional study was conducted between September 2015 and October 2016 among men who have sex with men (MSM) and transgender women recruited from sexual health and antiretroviral therapy centers in Karachi. Eligible participants were aged [≥]18 years and self-reported anal sex within the past 6 months (N=298). Two anal specimens were collected for HPV DNA detection and genotyping using PCR, and anal squamous intraepithelial lesions (ASIL) were assessed cytologically using the Bethesda classification. Associations were estimated using Cox proportional hazards regression algorithms to derive prevalence ratios (PRs). Results: Among participants, 44% (n=133) were living with HIV. Overall HPV prevalence was 65.1%, rising to 87% among HIV-positive individuals compared to 48% among those without HIV ({chi}{superscript 2}p[≤]0.001). Likewise 28.9% of participants living with HIV were infected with two or more than two types of HPV as compared with 18.8% participants without HIV ({chi}{superscript 2}p[≤]0.001). HIV infection was strongly associated with HPV acquisition (adjusted PR 2.81, 95% CI 2.16-3.82). Among HPV-positive participants (n=194), 58.8% were co-infected with HIV. High-risk HPV was highly prevalent among those living with HIV (83.2% vs. 35.3% ({chi}{superscript 2}p[≤]0.001)), with HPV16 as the dominant oncogenic type. Multiple HPV infections were more common among HIV-positive individuals ({chi}{superscript 2}p[≤]0.001), and HIV seropositivity was 3.43 (95% CI: 2.55-3.51) times higher among those with high-risk HPV. Co-infected participants demonstrated prolonged smoking, longer duration of sex work, high-intensity sex work with limited condom negotiation, and higher prevalence of anal warts (all p<0.05). Anal dysplasia (ASIL) was present in 35% of participants and was higher among HIV-positive individuals (42.4% vs. 28.1%, p<0.001). HIV-HPV co-infection was independently associated with ASIL (adjusted PR 1.75, 95% CI 1.07-2.88), while high-risk HPV further amplified this risk (PR 3.04, 95% CI 1.75-5.26). Conclusion: These findings demonstrate a biological continuum in HIV-positive MSM and transgender women, where HIV increases HPV acquisition, persistence, and multiplicity, accelerating progression to anal dysplasia. This reflects a syndemic shaped by biological interaction and structural vulnerability. Integrating HPV screening and vaccination within HIV services is essential to interrupt progression to cancer in this high-risk population.
Garay, O.; Oltman, S.; Bear, R. J.; Lin, J.; Wojcicki, J. M.; Ryckman, K. K.; Jelliffe-Pawlowski, L. L.
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Background Preterm birth (PTB) rates among Hispanic/Latina individuals in the United States have risen over the past decade. Data suggests this rise may be driven in part by psychosocial stress. Leukocyte telomere length (LTL), a marker of cumulative cellular aging that shortens under chronic stress, may capture stress-related biological vulnerability, but has not been examined as a potential population-level contributor to PTB in Hispanic/Latina pregnancies. Objective To examine the association between mid-pregnancy maternal LTL and PTB in a population-based Hispanic/Latina cohort. Methods In a case-control study nested within a California singleton birth cohort (n = 436 Hispanic/Latina individuals; 215 PTB, 221 term births), LTL was measured by quantitative PCR from biobank specimens collected from 15 to 20 weeks of gestation. Covariates from linked birth certificate and hospital discharge records were included. Logistic regression estimated ORs and 95% CIs of PTB by LTL examined continuously and by percentile category (<=10th, 11th-89th, >=90th) with and without adjustment for covariates. Results Mean and median LTL did not differ between PTB and term births. LTL at or below the 10th percentile was associated with elevated odds of PTB relative to full-term birth (12.6% versus 4.3%; ORc = 3.2, 95% CI 1.3-7.9), persisting after partial (ORadj1 = 3.2, 95% CI 1.3-8.3) and full covariate adjustment (ORadj2 = 3.4, 95% CI 1.3-9.3). Subgroup analyses showed consistent directional patterns across PTB subgroups and for early term birth (ORadj2 = 5.1, 95% CI 1.5-17.0). Conclusions Mid-pregnancy maternal LTL <=10th percentile was associated with more than three times the odds of PTB, with risk concentrated at the extreme low tail of the distribution. Consistent with a cumulative allostatic load model, markedly short LTL at mid-gestation may reflect elevated stress-related biological risk for preterm delivery. These findings support upstream investment in stress reduction and prospective LTL research in high-burden populations.
Kazemi, H.; Drake, J.; Bigdeli, T.; Bacanu, S.; Nguyen, T. H.; Benke, K.; Maher, B.; Knowles, J.; McCarroll, S.; Carvalho, C.; Medeiros, H.; Ferreira, R.; Pato, M.; Pato, C.; Vladimirov, V.; Fanous, A.
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Abstract Schizophrenia (SCZ) and bipolar disorder (BPD) are highly heritable psychiatric disorders with complex polygenic architectures. Genome-wide association studies (GWASs) have identified numerous common variant associations, but rarer variants detectable through whole-genome sequencing (WGS) remain underexplored. We conducted rare variant association analysis using WGS data from the Portuguese Island Collection (PIC), including 28 families with SCZ (n = 53) and 41 families with BPD (n = 83) cases, and population controls (n = 62). Following ANNOVAR and CADD annotation, burden analysis of deleterious variants showed that both affected and unaffected family members from SCZ and BPD pedigrees had significantly higher burdens of rare deleterious variants compared to controls (p < 0.0001), with no significant differences observed between affected and unaffected relatives, consistent with shared familial genetic liability. Polygenic Risk Score (PRS) analysis confirmed significant genetic contributions to both disorders within PIC. Association analyses were subsequently performed using SAIGE-GENE+ identifying 483 and 583 nominally significant (suggestive associations) gene sets (p-value [≤] 0.05; FDR > 0.05) for SCZ and BPD, respectively, including gene sets related to neurotransmission, synaptic function and structure, neurodevelopment, and neuroinflammation as well as major signaling pathways. Cross disorder overlaps also identified shared suggestive enrichment of GABA and glutamate signaling, synaptic signaling, and Wnt signaling gene sets in both SCZ and BPD. These findings support shared rare variant burden within multiplex psychiatric families and highlight the role of gene-set based rare variant analysis in identifying neurobiological pathways relevant to SCZ and BPD. Keywords: WGS, Rare Variants, Schizophrenia, Bipolar Disorder
Zhang, E.; Tran, T.; Shun, K.; Tran, D.; Tsai, A.; Kwang, E.; DerSarkissian, M.; Kuo, T.
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The Asian population in Los Angeles is among the largest and most heterogeneous in the U.S. This is true culturally and health-wise. Older Asians have differing risks for cardiovascular and cardiometabolic disease, depending on their ethnicity, health literacy, and lifestyle choices. This pilot examines several of these factors in a small but diverse group of older Asian adults who attended community health events from 2024-2025. Self-reported and biometric data were collected at five such events hosted by the Asian Pacific Health Corps at UCLA. The pilot generated health literacy and lifestyle (HLL) scores for all participating attendees and explored how they relate to their socio-demographics, healthcare habits, and predictions of their own health data. Overall, there were significantly more females than males with higher HLL scores (p = 0.027). College education (p = 0.028) and "normal" ranges for biometric data (e.g., blood pressure, BMI, blood glucose, cholesterol) were related to higher median HLL scores. With a few exceptions, fewer than 50% accurately predicted their biometric numbers regardless of HLL scores, suggesting a disconnect between perception and reality, and that better provider-patient communication may help foster greater patient understanding about their chronic conditions. These HLL score distributions indicate that educational attainment, better awareness of one's health, and high health literacy are individual factors that may influence older Asians' understanding and potential approach to managing their health conditions.
Randolph, A.; Dastin-Van Rijm, E.; Anderson, S.; Caola, L.; Kummerfeld, E.; Sullivan, C.; Simpson, S.; Kallar, A.; Banerjee, R.; Houghton, A.
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Background: Adverse childhood experiences (ACEs) are traumatic or adverse events in early life that can have lasting effects on behavioral, emotional, and psychological functioning. Prior research suggests ACEs relate to later psychiatric outcomes through threshold, cumulative, and individual-specific risk patterns. Few studies, however, have operationalized all three models to test ACE-specific associations with diagnosed psychiatric disorders in individuals who are adopted or with foster care histories. Methods: We conducted a cross-sectional retrospective study using electronic health record data from foster care and adopted patients aged 0-21 years old seen at the University of Minnesota Adoption Medicine Clinic (UMN-AMC) between 2014-2024. Extracted measures included ACE history, demographics, and psychiatric diagnoses. We used latent class analysis and logistic regression to identify clusters of adversity and estimate associations with psychiatric diagnosis domains, adjusting for Sex and Age at Initial Visit. Results: ACEs showed a threshold pattern across psychiatric domains, with higher ACE counts associated with greater odds of psychiatric diagnoses. Individual risk modeling indicated that exposure to abuse or violence was associated with higher odds of psychiatric diagnoses. Across cumulative and individual risk approaches, Anxiety Disorders, Mood Disorders, and Behavioral or Emotional Disorders showed the greatest sensitivity to adversity. Conclusion: Current ACE models may not fully capture neurodevelopmental impacts reflected in diagnosed psychiatric disorders among adolescents, particularly in high-risk groups such as foster and adopted individuals. In a large clinic sample our findings support a nuanced association between ACEs and later psychiatric diagnoses and highlight the need for ACE-focused assessment, prevention, and treatment strategies tailored to foster care and adopted populations.
von Itter, M.-N.; Grune, E.; Nonnenmacher, T.; Rach, S.; Flis, M.; Haueise, T.; Weiss, J.; Brenner, H.; Keil, T.; Roden, M.; Schulze, M. B.; Schulz-Menger, J. E.; Völzke, H.; Stefan, N.; Schlett, C. L.; Kauczor, H.-U.; Machann, J.; Bamberg, F.; Nattenmüller, J.; Norajitra, T.; Rospleszcz, S.
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Background and Aims: Steatotic liver disease (SLD) has high clinical and public health relevance. Robust population estimates of SLD and its subcategories are challenging due to the limitations of ultrasound measurements or non-invasive scores, particularly for low-grade steatosis. We aimed to quantify SLD prevalence using magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) in the population-based German National Cohort (NAKO). Methods: Hepatic multi-echo Dixon MRI was performed at 5 dedicated study sites with identical setup across Germany. Liver fat (proton density fat fraction, PDFF), R2* as proxy for liver iron, and liver volume were assessed. The resulting data of N = 29'842 individuals (age range 20-72 years) were weighted by survey weights for regional representativeness, resulting in a sample of 50% women and a mean age of 45.6 years. SLD was defined as PDFF [≥] 5.75%, and sex-specific prevalence according to age, BMI, socioeconomic status and geographic region was calculated. Results: Overall, SLD prevalence was 21.3% in women and 35.7% in men, and the majority were metabolic dysfunction-associated (MASLD, 89.3% of all SLD cases). Prevalence increased with age in a sex-specific pattern, suggesting potential menopausal effects in women. There was a relevant prevalence of SLD in individuals with normal weight (5.3% in women, 13.2% in men) and the age group <25 years (7.5% in women, 11.9% in women). Differences in prevalence between low and high socioeconomic status were more pronounced in women (37% vs 15.8%) compared to men (45.5% vs 30.3%). Conclusions: Data underscore the high public health relevance of SLD and its subcategory MASLD. The considerable prevalence in groups historically considered low-risk, such as younger or lean individuals, emphasizes the need for raising awareness early.
Ishikawa, K.; Asada, T.; Richardson, W.; Marius, C.; Ishikawa, M.; Nguyen, T.; Varnadore, P.; Tani, S.; Passias, P.; Alman, B. A.
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Introduction Denosumab increases bone mineral density and reduces fracture risk in patients with osteoporosis. However, whether BMD response to denosumab differs by age, particularly during longer term treatment, remains unclear. This study investigated the association between baseline age and BMD gain during 3 years of denosumab treatment in patients with osteoporosis. Methods This retrospective study included patients with osteoporosis who were treated with denosumab. DXA-based BMD and bone turnover markers were followed for up to 3 years. Percent BMD gain from baseline, defined as %BMD gain, was evaluated. The longitudinal association between baseline age and %BMD gain was assessed using multivariable linear mixed-effects models for the lumbar spine and total hip. Analyses were performed in the treatment naive cohort and the overall cohort according to prior osteoporosis treatment status. Results A total of 255 patients were included in the analysis, of whom 110 had not received prior osteoporosis treatment. In multivariable linear mixed-effects models, older baseline age was associated with smaller lumbar spine %BMD gain in the treatment naive cohort at both 1 and 3 years. Each 1-year increase in age was associated with a 0.187 percentage-point lower lumbar spine %BMD gain at 1 year and a 0.293 percentage-point lower gain at 3 years (1 year: {beta} = -0.187, p = 0.006, 3 years: {beta} = -0.293, p = 0.031). In contrast, baseline age was not significantly associated with total hip %BMD gain in the treatment naive cohort (1 year: {beta} = -0.011, p = 0.826; 3 years: {beta} = 0.028, p = 0.727). In the overall cohort, baseline age was not significantly associated with %BMD gain at either the lumbar spine or total hip at 1 or 3 years (all p > 0.05). Conclusion Older baseline age was associated with a modestly smaller lumbar spine BMD gain in treatment naive patients, whereas no significant age-related association was observed at the total hip. In the overall cohort, age was not significantly associated with BMD gain at either site. These findings suggest that age may have a limited, site specific influence on BMD response to denosumab, particularly in treatment naive patients, and may support more individualized treatment planning in patients with osteoporosis.
Lee, C. W.; Wong, A.; Yin, L.; Choi, Y.
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Background: Self-reported confidence in health information seeking does not reliably predict accurate health knowledge, yet the population-level distribution of this discordance and its demographic predictors have received limited direct study. This study aimed to identify and characterize a Confident-Incorrect phenotype among U.S. adults: individuals with high perceived health information competence who simultaneously hold inaccurate or fatalistic beliefs about cancer. Methods: Cross-sectional analysis of HINTS 7 (N = 7,278). A Confidence Index (3-item digital literacy composite (Cronbach's = 0.674) and an Evidence-Consistent Knowledge Score (factual cancer knowledge minus a cancer fatalism composite; fatalism subscale = 0.563) were computed and combined into a discordance framework. Median-split classification produced four phenotypes. Gaussian Mixture Model clustering with four components provided moderate independent validation (inter-method agreement = 65.2%). Survey-weighted multinomial logistic regression (n = 5,771; McFadden pseudo-R2 = 0.129) examined phenotype predictors. Results: An estimated 20.3% of U.S. adults were classified as Confident-Incorrect. They reported confidence levels similar to Well-Informed adults (z = 0.72 vs. 0.82) but scored 2.8-fold lower on objective cancer knowledge (0.74 vs. 2.06 out of 4) and exhibited the highest cancer fatalism of any phenotype (3.17 vs. 1.65 out of 4). Only 14.3% correctly identified alcohol as a cancer risk factor (vs. 58.8% of Well-Informed adults). Cancer screening rates did not differ meaningfully across phenotypes. Lower education (OR = 0.754), Hispanic ethnicity (OR = 1.788), non-Hispanic Black race (OR = 1.893), higher social media use (OR = 1.097), and lower trust in scientists (OR = 0.749) independently predicted Confident-Incorrect membership. Conclusions: An estimated one in five U.S. adults is overconfident in health information competence while holding substantially inaccurate beliefs about cancer prevention. Cancer screening rates did not follow the expected gradient across phenotypes, a null finding that cautions against inferring immediate behavioral impact from observed belief gaps. Interventions targeting specific factual errors and cancer fatalism are more likely to reach this group than general health literacy programs.
Walhovd, K. B.; Berg, A. I.; Buratti, S.; Buren, J.; Bjalkebring, P.; Fischer, M.; Hansson, I.; Hassing, L.; Jonsson, A.-C.; Jonsson, L.; Lindwall, M.; Nilsson, T.; Rogeberg, O.; Segerberg, A.; Thorvaldsson, V.; Landen, M.; Klapp, A.; Lovden, M.
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Lower cognitive ability measured in childhood or late adolescence has been consistently associated with higher mortality risk across adulthood. However, this evidence largely relies on single assessments, leaving it unclear to what extent mortality risk reflects cognitive differences established early in life versus developmental divergence during adolescence - a period of substantial neurocognitive plasticity. Using two nationally representative Swedish cohorts comprising 9,412 males born in 1948 and 1953, we linked cognitive ability assessed in primary school at age 13 years and military conscription at age 18 years to all-cause and cause-specific mortality recorded in nationwide registers through 2025. We decomposed late-adolescent cognitive ability into childhood cognitive level and adolescent cognitive change and evaluated their independent associations with mortality. Childhood cognitive level (HR = 0.81; 95% CI, 0.78-0.85) and adolescent cognitive change (HR = 0.84; 95% CI, 0.79-0.89) independently predicted lower mortality risk, also after adjustment for parental education. Childhood cognitive level and adolescent cognitive change showed partially distinct cause-specific patterns. Childhood cognitive level was most strongly associated with mortality from intrinsic causes, whereas adolescent cognitive change showed relatively stronger associations with external causes, particularly accidental deaths. Although adolescent cognitive change was associated with psychosocial factors including education and psychiatric diagnosis at conscription, its association with mortality persisted after adjustment for these factors. These findings suggest that cognitive development during adolescence carries independent prognostic information regarding long-term survival beyond cognitive level established by late childhood, highlighting adolescence as a consequential period for lifelong health.
Pan, Y.; Lin, H.; HIRONO, T.; Yang, Y.; Liu, Y.; Zhang, Y.
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Background As lockdown measures was eased, pregnant women faced an elevated risk of COVID-19 infection, potentially impacting their mental health. This study aimed to investigate the prevalence of antenatal depression (AD) post-lockdown and develop predictive models for AD risk using machine learning. Methods A cross-sectional study utilizing the Edinburgh Postnatal Depression Scale was conducted in Beijing and Guizhou, China, from January to August 2023. Data was randomly split into training and test datasets (6:4 ratio), with logistic regression (LR), Support Vector Machine (SVM), K-Nearest Neighbors (KNN), Random Forest (RF), eXtreme Gradient Boosting (XGBoost), and Gradient Boosting Decision Tree (GBDT) models trained and compared. The best model underwent further examination, including SHapley Additive exPlanations (SHAP) for feature importance, calibration curve (CC) for discrimination, and decision curve analysis (DCA) for clinical benefit. Results The effective response rate was 91.07% (459/504), with 25.7% (118/459) testing positive for AD. Multivariate analysis identified "sleep disorders," "family support level," and "COVID-19 symptom severity" as independent predictors. RF model showed the highest area under the curve in both training (0.842) and testing (0.724) datasets, with SHAP emphasizing the greatest impact of "sleep disorders" on AD. The RF model's calibration (P > 0.05) and clinical utility across thresholds (8%-95% and 10%-58%) were confirmed by CC and DCA, respectively. Conclusions AD strongly correlated with "sleep disorders," "family support level," and "COVID-19 symptom severity" post-lockdown, and the EPDS-based RF model effectively predicted AD risk.
Monk, B. S.; Strauss, D.
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Background/Objectives People living with HIV face overlapping hardship through medical, behavioral, and social needs that require an integrated and coordinated approach. Harlem United multiservice model provides healthcare, food assistance, housing support, harm reduction services, behavioral health counseling, case management, and much more to support their clients. This study is an examination on how the participation in the Harlem United multiservice model is associated with changes over time in client health, behavioral health, and social outcomes. Methods This study performed a longitudinal program evaluation examining Harlem United clients enrolled between January 2020 and January 2025 who remained engaged in services for a minimum of one year. Client outcomes were assessed across three time points: Baseline, Year 1, and Year 2. The sample included 154 clients at baseline (N=154) with a total of 428 observations (N=428). Quantitative measures that were assessed included program involvement, housing stability, PHQ4 scores, food insecurity, medication adherence, and viral suppression. Data was analyzed using IBM SPSS Statistics through descriptive statistics, frequency tables, and generalized estimating equation models (GEE) to account for repeated observation over time. Results Medication adherence and viral suppression remained consistently high across all time points in the longitudinal study suggesting that most clients were virally suppressed or undetectable at baseline. Housing stability was statistically significant Wald X2 (2) = 156.073, p < 0.001 with improvements noted in Year 1 and Year 2 compared to baseline. Program level was significantly associated with PHQ4 scores, Wald X2 (1) = 7.902, p = 0.005. Food insecurity was also associated with PHQ4 scores, Wald X2 (1) = 5.462, p = 0.019. Findings suggest that clients with higher PHQ4 scores were involved in more programs compared to clients only enrolled in 1-2 programs. Additionally, clients with higher PHQ4 scores were more food insecure highlighting the relationship between social needs and mental health. Conclusion: Findings suggest that the Harlem United multiservice model played a supportive role in the maintenance of health and social outcomes through medication adherence and viral suppression. Although, significant improvement was not reflected across several outcomes, the association between PHQ4 scores, food insecurity, and an increase in program involvement suggest that the multiservice is reaching more clients with complex behavioral and social needs. Continued integration of these services is important for sustaining client stability while addressing social determinants of health.
Kosola, S.; Moro, S.; Holopainen, E.
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Objective: Cross-sectional studies indicate associations between self-reported social media use and adolescent wellbeing outcomes. We aimed to evaluate longitudinal associations of objectively measured smartphone and social media use with psychosocial wellbeing. Design: Observational study with one year of follow-up Setting: High schools in Finland from 2022 to 2023 Population: 259 adolescent girls (mean age 16.3 years at baseline) Main outcome measures: screenshots depicting smartphone and social media use, Bergen Social Media Addiction Scale (BSMAS), Generalized Anxiety Disorder-7 questionnaire, Body Appreciation Scale 2 (BAS-2) and visual analogue scales (VAS) of mood, tiredness, and loneliness Results: Across one year of follow-up, anxiety, body appreciation, and mood improved, but possible social media addiction increased from 15% to 17%. Social media addiction at baseline was associated with increased anxiety (r=0.29, p<0.001), lower body appreciation (r=-0.15, p=0.022), and more loneliness (r=0.20, p=0.001) at follow-up. Anxiety at baseline was associated with social media addiction at follow-up (r=0.19, p=0.005). The highest quartile of TikTok users reported more social media addiction (BSMAS 19 [IQR 16-21] vs. 17 [IQR 14-20]; p=0.009) and lower body appreciation (BAS-2 32 [IQR 28-38] vs. 35 [IQR 29-40]; p=0.003) than did others. The highest quartile of Snapchat users reported more social media addiction (BSMAS 19 [IQR 15-21] vs. 17 [IQR 14-20]; p=0.007) and tiredness (VAS 21 [IQR 13-32] vs. 26 [IQR 15-35]; p=0.049) than did others. Conclusions: Consistent with cross-sectional studies, social media addiction was associated with poorer psychosocial outcomes across follow-up. Policies to protect adolescents from social media addiction are urgently needed.
Sullivan, C. R.; Anderson, S.; Caola, L.; Rawstern, T.; Loleng, J.; Roghair, J.; Dastin-Van Rijn, E.; Gustafson, K.; Randolph, A.
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We assembled a multimodal clinical dataset describing demographics, placement history, prenatal substance exposure (PSE), birth characteristics, adverse childhood experiences (ACEs), International Classification of Diseases (ICD) diagnoses, and laboratory results for 3,685+ pediatric patients evaluated between 2014 and 2024 at the University of Minnesotas Adoption Medicine Clinic (AMC). Data were curated from electronic medical records through a combined manual and automated extraction protocol using a standardized operating procedure. The resulting dataset integrates structured EMR fields including neuropsychological, laboratory, and diagnostic information with manually pulled fields of ACE scores, PSE history, and placement history. We provide an overview of the population represented and describe the datasets structure, variable definitions, and validation procedures. This resource enables investigations into how early adversity impacts medical and developmental outcomes, and provides one of the largest standardized clinical placement history, PSE, and ACE datasets in an adoption and foster care pediatric population.
Sun, H.; Jackson, S. E.; Xiao, L.; Cox, S.; Oldham, M.; Tattan-Birch, H. O.
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Abstract Aims To examine which demographic groups nicotine pouch advertisers chose to target on social media, and which groups Meta's algorithms actually delivered the adverts to. Design Cross-sectional analysis of advert-level data from the Meta Ad Library. Setting Meta social media platforms (including Facebook and Instagram) in the UK. Cases A random sample of 741 nicotine pouch adverts shown in the 12 months up to December 2025, and a comparison sample of 1,125 general adverts. Analyses of reach were restricted to adverts eligible for all genders and adult ages (444 pouch adverts; 674 general). Measurements Outcomes were advertiser-set gender and age-group targeting criteria (i.e., groups eligible to be shown each advert) and estimated advert reach to each group (i.e., number of people who saw each advert). Male-to-female reach ratios within age groups, and reach ratios comparing age groups, were calculated per advert and summarised using geometric means. To assess whether patterns were pouch-specific, comparisons with general adverts were made using ratios of reach ratios (RRR). Findings Advertisers of nicotine pouches targeted a broad sample; most adverts (79.1%; 586/741) were eligible to be shown to all genders, the remainder were restricted to men only. All were restricted to adults (minimum age 18 years) and most (95.6%; 708/741) had no upper age limit. Despite this, of pouch adverts eligible to be shown to all adults, adverts were more likely to reach men, particularly among younger men. Among 18-24-year-olds, pouch adverts reached around ten times as many men as women (RR 10.0, 95% CI 8.7-11.5), compared with a slight skew towards women for general adverts (RR 0.81, 95% CI 0.71-0.94), corresponding to an RRR of 12.3 (95% CI 10.0-15.1). Pouch adverts also showed a skew in reach towards younger age groups. Relative to those aged 35-44 years, reach was higher among 18-24-year-olds for nicotine pouch adverts (RR 1.33, 95% CI 1.17-1.51) but much lower for general adverts (RR 0.19, 95% CI 0.17-0.21), corresponding to an RRR of 7.0 (95% CI 6.0-8.2). Conclusions Nicotine pouch adverts on social media are often eligible to be shown broadly to all demographic groups but are disproportionately delivered to young men.
Ayanga, R. A.; Katumba Muwangala, N.; Babirye, J.; Nkwangu, R.
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Background: Persons with disabilities, particularly deaf individuals, remain a largely overlooked population in sexual and reproductive health (SRH) programming globally, with this gap especially pronounced in low- and middle-income countries. Deafness imposes substantial barriers to accessing information and services that are routinely available to hearing peers, further exacerbated in the post-COVID-19 era. This study assessed deaf adolescents' knowledge of and access to SRH education and services in Wakiso District, Uganda, and explored systemic, institutional, community, and adolescent-level factors shaping access. Methods: A mixed-methods cross-sectional study was conducted at Wakiso Secondary School for the Deaf from July 2022 to January 2023. Quantitative data were collected from 70 consecutively sampled deaf adolescents aged 13-19 years using a structured questionnaire. Qualitative data were gathered through key informant interviews (KIIs) with four purposively selected stakeholders and a focus group discussion (FGD) with deaf adolescent students. Qualitative data were analysed thematically. Results: The mean participant age was 17 years (SD {+/-}1.8); 65.7% were female. A large majority (88.6%) had heard of SRH components, and 98.6% perceived a need for SRH education or services. However, 84.3% reported challenges accessing these services at least 85% of the time. No participant had ever received SRH education or services through a formal health facility. The FGD revealed that adolescents' conceptualisation of SRH was narrow, centred on body hygiene and HIV prevention, while service-seeking was reactive and symptom-driven. Five cross-cutting themes emerged from the KIIs and were reinforced by FGD findings: communication barriers; inadequate and inaccessible services; family and community isolation; existing platforms and positive practices; and negative provider attitudes and limited capacity. The school nurse emerged as the sole functional SRH access point for most participants. Conclusion: Despite high awareness and near-universal perceived need, deaf adolescents in Uganda face profound multilevel barriers to SRH access. Structural, psychosocial, and knowledge-related barriers interact to exclude this population from formal health services. Findings call for disability-responsive SRH integration into health systems, training of health workers in accessible communication, community capacity building, and co-design of SRH programmes with deaf adolescents.
McLauchlan, J.; Marr, C.; Kemp, R.; Dean, K.
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Forensic patients often have complex and costly healthcare needs, even following discharge from secure care. However, little is known about their health and justice outcomes after community reintegration. To address this gap in the literature, we conducted a systematic review and meta-analysis to estimate the incidence of key post-discharge outcomes among community-discharged forensic patients, including any reoffending, violent reoffending, reconvictions, readmissions, all-cause mortality, and suicide. We systematically searched PsycINFO, Embase, CINAHL, Medline, PubMed, and ProQuest Dissertations from database inception to May 2025 (PROSPERO CRD42024529265). Random-effect meta-analyses were used to generate pooled incidence estimates, with heterogeneity quantified using prediction intervals. A total of 49 studies met inclusion criteria (total patient n = 18,871) and contributed to the meta-analyses. The pooled incidence rate per 100,000 person-years was: any reoffending 3,889 (95% CI 2,055, 7,359; 95% PI 290, 52,136); violent reoffending 1,851 (95% CI 1,229, 2,789; 95% PI 201, 17,068); reconvictions 3,291 (95% CI 2,591, 4,179; 95% PI 950, 11,394); readmissions 7,945 (95% CI 5,507, 11,463; 95% PI 1,225, 51,548); all-cause mortality 1,789 (95% CI 1,341, 2,388; 95% PI 673, 4,756); and suicide 407 (95% CI 319, 519; 95% PI 225, 735). Overall, the reoffending rate for forensic patients discharged to the community was lower than that reported for other cohorts of people charged with general and violent offences. However, despite typically receiving long admission periods, discharged forensic patients continue to experience high rates of readmission, all-cause mortality, and suicide relative to other psychiatric patient groups in the community. Together, our findings highlight a need for enhanced post-discharge suicide support for forensic patients living in the community to better facilitate successful, long-term reintegration.
Bernig, U.; Kördel, M.; Sundström-Poromaa, I.; Kroemer, N. B.; Henes, M.
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Objective To examine the effects of combined oral contraceptive (OC) use on clinical markers of ovarian reserve by comparing Anti-Muellerian Hormone (AMH), antral follicle count (AFC), and ovarian volume (OV) before and after starting or stopping OC. Methods This analysis is based on data from a prospective cohort study conducted at the University Hospital Tubingen, Germany, as part of the IRTG-2804 project. A total of 54 healthy women were included and categorized into three groups based on their OC use status: OC starters (n = 12), stoppers (n = 16), and long-term OC-users (n = 26). Each participant underwent a transvaginal ultrasound (including AFC and OV) and serum sampling (including AMH) at two time points (S1 and S2), three to six months apart. OC starters were assessed first during the early follicular phase (day 1-7) and then during active OC intake (day 8-21), while stoppers were assessed in the reverse order. Long-term users were assessed twice during active OC intake. Results OC stoppers showed significant within-group increases in all ovarian reserve markers, including AMH ({Delta} = 2.57 ng/mL, p < .001), AFC ({Delta} = 3.88, p = .004), and OV, which almost doubled (1.94-fold increase; 95% CI [1.35, 2.80], p < .001). In contrast, OC starters exhibited a significant decline in AMH ({Delta} = -1.25 ng/mL, p = .013), but no changes in AFC or OV. No significant longitudinal changes were observed among long-term OC users. Conclusion AMH levels decrease after starting OC use whereas AFC and OV are not affected. In contrast, AMH, AFC, and OV recover within three to six months after stopping OC, suggesting a reversible suppression of ovarian reserve markers during OC use. These findings are clinically relevant for fertility counseling and for the interpretation of ovarian reserve markers in women using hormonal contraception.
Frankovich, J.; Dubin, R. A.; Natarajan, C.; Schlenk, N.; Pedrosa, E.; Stolte, E.; Rice, N.; Soorajkumar, A.; Vettiatil, D.; van der Spek, P. J.; Cunningham, J. L.; Lachman, H. M.
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Abnormalities in the gut microbiome, intestinal permeability, and the gut-immune-brain axis are increasingly linked to neuropsychiatric disorders, neurodegenerative disorders, inflammatory bowel disease (IBD), and other immunologic/autoimmune conditions. We investigated these phenomena in 128 youth with Pediatric Acute-Onset Neuropsychiatric Syndrome (PANS) and individuals with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) and other neurodevelopmental disorders (NDD) characterized by profound, unexplained deteriorations/regressions in developmental, neuropsychiatric, and behavioral functioning. Previous studies we have carried out showed that immune dysregulation and DNA damage response (DDR) gene mutations are implicated in a subset of these patients. The current study examines the role of genetic variants affecting intestinal homeostasis. We report a series of patients exhibiting both neuropsychiatric deterioration and gastrointestinal symptoms. Genetic analysis identified ultrarare (minor allele frequency < 0.001) pathogenic or likely pathogenic variants in eight genes primarily expressed in the intestines and associated with IBD, dysbiosis, or intestinal permeability. Across thirteen patients, mutations were identified in DUOX2 (n=4), SLC10A2 (n=2), UNC45A, TTC7A, LGALS4, SI, CCR9, MEP1B, and BACH2. While these findings suggest a potential role for genetic variants governing intestinal homeostasis in these cases of neuropsychiatric decline, their presence in only a small subgroup necessitates larger, prospective cohorts to determine whether these variants are statistically significant and play a definitive role in the pathogenesis of these disorders.
Happel, A.-U.; Passmore, J.-A. S.; Sinkala, M.; Jaumdally, S.; Gamieldien, H.; Hu, N.-C.; Langwenya, N.; Jones, H. E.; Hoover, D.; Myer, L.; Todd, C.
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Background: Intrauterine contraceptives (IUCs) are effective, but effects on genital inflammation among women living with HIV (WLHIV) by antiretroviral therapy (ART) use are unclear. We evaluated the longitudinal effects of copper IUC (C IUC) and the levonorgestrel intrauterine system (LNG IUS) on cervicovaginal cytokine profiles in a secondary analysis of a randomized trial (NCT01721798, 2013 to 2016). Methods: Cervicovaginal secretions were collected from 100 WLHIV (non ART users; ART users) randomized 1:1 to C IUC or LNG IUS. Twenty eight cytokines were measured prior to insertion and 3 and 6 months post insertion. Cytokine concentrations at each follow up visit were compared with baseline, using participant fixed effects models stratified by ART status. Results: At enrolment, non ART users had higher average concentrations of most cytokines (21/28) than women using ART. Among non-ART users, IUC use was not associated with cytokine increases; only MCP1 increased significantly at 3 months among C IUC users (log10 geometric mean ratio 0.77, 95%CI 0.38 to 1.17), while none increased with LNG IUS use. Among ART users, C IUC insertion resulted in broad and sustained cytokine increases at both 3 (16/28) and 6 months (15/28). At month 3, the largest increases in log10 geometric mean were observed for IL6 (1.04, 0.72 to 1.36), RANTES (0.97, 0.54 to 1.40), MCP1 (0.71, 0.46 to 0.96), MIP1; (0.66, 0.37 to 0.94), and GCSF (0.63, 0.36 to 0.89), which was maintained until month 6. Cytokine changes following LNG IUS insertion were minimal (IL5, month 3). Conclusions: Among ART users, C IUC is associated with increases in cervicovaginal cytokines, across functional classes. This supports LNG IUS as a less inflammatory option for WLHIV to minimize genital immune activation.