Omicron Infection and Severity After Life Adversities: Evidence From a Trauma Injury Cohort Study in China.

Biopsychosocial science and medicine Pub Date : 2026-05-01 Epub Date: 2026-01-30 DOI:10.1097/PSY.0000000000001469
Jiesiwei Luo, Shu Wen, Huazhen Yang, Yueyao Xu, Yu Zeng, Wenwen Chen, Yanan Zhang, Guanglin Wang, Wei Zhang, Fang Fang, Unnur A Valdimarsdóttir, Huan Song, Jie Song
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Abstract

Objective: Life adversities may have long-lasting effects on mental and physical health, including respiratory infectious diseases. However, studies on different types of life adversities and their effects on COVID-19, especially omicron infection and severity, are scarce.

Methods: We established a cohort of 3567 patients admitted for physical injury to a trauma medical center in Southwest China between June 2020 and February 2024. Three types of life adversities-childhood maltreatment, adverse lifetime experiences, and index injury-were assessed through interviews. Omicron infection, severity, and symptoms were collected through a self-report questionnaire. Logistic regression was used to examine associations with subsequent omicron infection and severity, with further stratification by a polygenic risk score (PRS) of severe COVID-19. Mediation analyses were conducted to evaluate the contribution of post-injury psychiatric symptoms.

Results: More severe index injury was associated with a higher risk of omicron infection (ORs = 1.64 to 1.67), partially mediated by posttrauma anxiety, depression, and stress-related symptoms (28.66 to 34.16%). Childhood physical abuse and severe index injury (ORs = 1.86 to 2.16) were associated with a higher risk of severe omicron infection requiring essential treatment or hospitalization. Childhood sexual abuse and individual adverse lifetime experiences (ORs = 1.48 to 2.89) were associated with a greater number of severe omicron infection symptoms ( N ≥3 vs no symptoms). Similar patterns were observed in individuals with a high PRS of severe COVID-19.

Conclusions: Our findings suggest that individuals with greater exposure to traumatic experiences are at increased risk of severe omicron infection, adding to the growing knowledge that recent and early life adversities may have both short and long-term negative influences on health outcomes.

生活逆境后组粒感染和严重程度:来自中国创伤队列研究的证据。
目的:生活逆境可能对身心健康产生长期影响,包括呼吸道传染病。然而,关于不同类型的生活逆境及其对COVID-19的影响,特别是欧米克隆感染和严重程度的研究很少。方法:我们在2020年6月至2024年2月期间在中国西南地区的一家创伤医疗中心建立了3567例身体损伤患者的队列。三种类型的生活逆境-童年虐待,不良的一生经历和指数伤害-通过访谈进行评估。通过自述问卷收集组粒感染情况、严重程度及症状。使用Logistic回归来检查与随后的Omicron感染和严重程度的关联,并通过严重COVID-19的多基因风险评分(PRS)进一步分层。采用中介分析来评估伤后精神症状的影响。结果:指数损伤越严重,Omicron感染风险越高(or =1.64-1.67),部分介导因素为创伤后焦虑、抑郁和应激相关症状(28.66-34.16%)。儿童时期身体虐待和严重指数损伤(or =1.86-2.16)与需要必要治疗或住院治疗的严重欧米克隆感染的高风险相关。儿童期性虐待和个人终生不良经历(or =1.48-2.89)与大量严重组粒感染症状(N≥3 vs.无症状)相关。在严重COVID-19的高PRS个体中也观察到类似的模式。结论:我们的研究结果表明,创伤经历较多的个体严重欧米克隆感染的风险增加,这增加了人们对近期和早期生活逆境可能对健康结果产生短期和长期负面影响的认识。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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