O'Brien Jessica W, Hill Shirley Y
Department of Psychiatry , School of Medicine, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania; Department of Psychology , University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.
Alcohol Clin Exp Res. 2014 Dec;38(12):2952-61. doi: 10.1111/acer.12569.
Prenatal exposures to alcohol, cigarettes, and other drugs of abuse are associated with numerous adverse consequences for affected offspring, including increased risk for substance use and abuse. However, maternal substance use during pregnancy appears to occur more often in those with a family history of alcohol dependence. Utilizing a sample that is enriched for familial alcohol dependence and includes controls selected for virtual absence of familial alcohol dependence could provide important information on the relative contribution of familial risk and prenatal exposures to offspring substance use.
A sample of multigenerational families specifically ascertained to be at either high or low risk for developing alcohol dependence (AD) provided biological offspring for a longitudinal prospective study. High-risk families were selected based on the presence of 2 alcohol-dependent sisters. Low-risk families were selected on the basis of minimal first and second-degree relatives with AD. High-risk (HR = 99) and Low-risk offspring (LR = 110) were assessed annually during childhood and biennially in young adulthood regarding their alcohol, drug, and cigarette use. At the first childhood visit, mothers were interviewed concerning their prenatal use of substances.
High-risk mothers were more likely to use alcohol, cigarettes, and other drugs during pregnancy than low-risk control mothers, and to consume these substances in greater quantities. Across the sample, prenatal exposure to alcohol was associated with increased risk for both offspring cigarette use and substance use disorders (SUD), and prenatal cigarette exposure was associated with increased risk for offspring cigarette use. Controlling for risk status by examining patterns within the HR sample, prenatal cigarette exposure remained a specific predictor of offspring cigarette use, and prenatal alcohol exposure was specifically associated with increased risk for offspring SUD.
Women with a family history of SUD are at increased risk for substance use during pregnancy. Both familial loading for alcohol dependence and prenatal exposure to alcohol or cigarettes are important risk factors in the development of offspring substance use. An inadequate assessment of family history may obscure important interactions between familial risk and prenatal exposures on offspring outcomes.
孕期暴露于酒精、香烟及其他滥用药物会给受影响的后代带来诸多不良后果,包括物质使用和滥用风险增加。然而,孕期母亲使用物质的情况似乎在有酒精依赖家族史的人群中更为常见。利用一个富含家族性酒精依赖且包含几乎没有家族性酒精依赖的对照组的样本,可为家族风险和孕期暴露对后代物质使用的相对影响提供重要信息。
一个经过专门确定为酒精依赖(AD)高风险或低风险的多代家庭样本,为一项纵向前瞻性研究提供了生物学后代。高风险家庭是根据有两名酒精依赖姐妹来选择的。低风险家庭是根据一级和二级亲属中几乎没有AD来选择的。高风险(HR = 99)和低风险后代(LR = 110)在童年期每年接受评估,在青年期每两年接受一次关于酒精、药物和香烟使用情况的评估。在首次童年期访视时,对母亲进行了关于她们孕期物质使用情况的访谈。
高风险母亲在孕期比低风险对照母亲更有可能使用酒精、香烟和其他药物,且使用量更大。在整个样本中,孕期暴露于酒精与后代吸烟和物质使用障碍(SUD)风险增加相关,孕期暴露于香烟与后代吸烟风险增加相关。通过检查高风险样本中的模式来控制风险状态,孕期暴露于香烟仍然是后代吸烟的一个特定预测因素,孕期暴露于酒精与后代SUD风险增加有特定关联。
有物质使用障碍家族史的女性孕期物质使用风险增加。酒精依赖的家族负荷以及孕期暴露于酒精或香烟都是后代物质使用发展中的重要风险因素。对家族史评估不足可能会掩盖家族风险和孕期暴露对后代结局的重要相互作用。