Merrill Palmer Skillman Institute, Wayne State University, Detroit, MI 48202, USA.
Alcohol. 2010 Nov-Dec;44(7-8):583-94. doi: 10.1016/j.alcohol.2009.03.003. Epub 2009 Dec 29.
Detecting patterns of maternal drinking that place fetuses at risk for fetal alcohol spectrum disorders (FASDs) is critical to diagnosis, treatment, and prevention but is challenging because information on antenatal drinking collected during pregnancy is often insufficient or lacking. Although retrospective assessments have been considered less favored by many researchers due to presumed poor reliability, this perception may be inaccurate because of reduced maternal denial and/or distortion. The present study hypothesized that fetal alcohol exposure, as assessed retrospectively during child adolescence, would be related significantly to prior measures of maternal drinking and would predict alcohol-related behavioral problems in teens better than antenatal measures of maternal alcohol consumption. Drinking was assessed during pregnancy, and retrospectively about the same pregnancy, at a 14-year follow-up in 288 African-American women using well-validated semistructured interviews. Regression analysis examined the predictive validity of both drinking assessments on pregnancy outcomes and on teacher-reported teen behavior outcomes. Retrospective maternal self-reported drinking assessed 14 years postpartum was significantly higher than antenatal reports of consumption. Retrospective report identified 10.8 times more women as risk drinkers (≥ one drink per day) than the antenatal report. Antenatal and retrospective reports were moderately correlated and both were correlated with the Michigan Alcoholism Screening Test. Self-reported alcohol consumption during pregnancy based on retrospective report identified significantly more teens exposed prenatally to at-risk alcohol levels than antenatal, in-pregnancy reports. Retrospective report predicted more teen behavior problems (e.g., attention problems and externalizing behaviors) than the antenatal report. Antenatal report predicted younger gestational age at birth and retrospective report predicted smaller birth size; neither predicted teen IQ. These results suggest that if only antenatal, in-pregnancy maternal report is used, then a substantial proportion of children exposed prenatally to risk levels of alcohol might be misclassified. The validity of retrospective assessment of prior drinking during pregnancy as a more effective indicator of prenatal exposure was established by predicting more behavioral problems in teens than antenatal report. Retrospective report can provide valid information about drinking during a prior pregnancy and may facilitate diagnosis and subsequent interventions by educators, social service personnel, and health-care providers, thereby reducing the life-long impact of FASDs.
检测使胎儿面临胎儿酒精谱系障碍 (FASD) 风险的母体饮酒模式对于诊断、治疗和预防至关重要,但具有挑战性,因为怀孕期间收集的产前饮酒信息通常不足或缺乏。尽管由于被认为可靠性差,许多研究人员认为回顾性评估不太受欢迎,但这种看法可能不准确,因为母亲否认和/或扭曲的情况减少了。本研究假设,在儿童青少年时期进行回顾性评估的胎儿酒精暴露,将与之前的母亲饮酒测量值显著相关,并能更好地预测青少年的酒精相关行为问题,而不是产前测量值。在 288 名非裔美国女性中,使用经过充分验证的半结构化访谈,在怀孕后 14 年的随访中评估了怀孕期间和怀孕期间的饮酒情况。回归分析检查了两种饮酒评估对妊娠结局和教师报告的青少年行为结局的预测有效性。产后 14 年进行的回顾性母亲自我报告饮酒量明显高于产前报告。回顾性报告确定了 10.8 倍以上的女性为风险饮酒者(每天饮酒一次以上),而产前报告则确定了更多的女性为风险饮酒者。产前和回顾性报告中度相关,两者都与密歇根酒精筛查测试相关。基于回顾性报告的怀孕期间自我报告饮酒量确定了比产前、怀孕时报告更多的青少年在子宫内接触到危险的酒精水平。回顾性报告预测了更多的青少年行为问题(例如,注意力问题和外化行为),而产前报告则预测了更多的青少年行为问题。产前报告预测了更年轻的胎龄和更小的出生体重;两者均未预测青少年的智商。这些结果表明,如果只使用产前、怀孕时的母亲报告,那么大量在子宫内接触到危险酒精水平的儿童可能会被错误分类。通过预测青少年比产前报告更多的行为问题,回顾性评估怀孕前饮酒的有效性作为产前暴露的更有效指标得到了证实。回顾性报告可以提供关于以前怀孕期间饮酒的有效信息,并可能通过教育工作者、社会服务人员和医疗保健提供者促进诊断和随后的干预,从而减少 FASD 的终身影响。