De Genna Natacha M, Goldschmidt Lidush, Day Nancy L, Cornelius Marie D
Department of Psychiatry, University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine, Pittsburgh, PA;
Western Psychiatric Institute and Clinic, University of Pittsburgh Medical Center, Pittsburgh, PA;
Nicotine Tob Res. 2016 May;18(5):988-92. doi: 10.1093/ntr/ntv269. Epub 2015 Dec 28.
The goal of this study was to identify maternal patterns of prenatal and postnatal cigarette smoking associated with adolescent smoking. We hypothesized that maternal use at multiple time points, especially at later assessments when the offspring were adolescents, would predict offspring use.
Pregnant women (N = 456: ages 13-42) were recruited from a prenatal clinic and interviewed during pregnancy and at delivery, providing data on cigarette use (any/none) for the first and third trimesters. Mothers were re-assessed at 6, 10, 14, and 16 years postpartum. Offspring reported cigarette use at age 16. Covariates included maternal race, age, education, family income, child age, parenting behavior, and other maternal and child substance use.
A growth mixture model revealed five patterns of tobacco use: infrequent/nonuse (39%), postpartum quitters (5%), later quitters (7%), increasing likelihood of being smokers (17%), and chronic users (32%). Offspring of postpartum quitters and the increasing likelihood of being smokers groups were more likely to use cigarettes, compared to adolescents of mothers from the infrequent/nonuse group, controlling for significant covariates.
This is the first study to examine trajectories of maternal cigarette use from pregnancy to 16 years postpartum, linking prenatal and postnatal patterns of maternal use to use in adolescent offspring. Our findings highlight the risk associated with prenatal exposure, because mothers who used during pregnancy but quit by 6 years postpartum still had offspring who were 3.5 times more likely to smoke than non/infrequent users.
This is the first study to examine trajectories of maternal cigarette use from the prenatal period to 16 years postpartum, and to link prenatal and postnatal patterns of use to use in adolescent offspring. We identified two long-term patterns of maternal cigarette use that were associated with offspring smoking at age 16, including one where offspring were exposed prenatally, but much less likely to be exposed to maternal cigarette use postpartum. Our findings highlight the risk associated with prenatal exposures for cigarette use in offspring, even if mothers quit in the postpartum.
本研究的目的是确定与青少年吸烟相关的产前和产后吸烟的母亲模式。我们假设母亲在多个时间点吸烟,尤其是在后代为青少年的后期评估中吸烟,会预测后代吸烟。
从一家产前诊所招募了孕妇(N = 456,年龄13 - 42岁),并在孕期和分娩时进行访谈,提供关于孕早期和孕晚期吸烟情况(吸/不吸)的数据。母亲们在产后6年、10年、14年和16年接受重新评估。后代报告了16岁时的吸烟情况。协变量包括母亲的种族、年龄、教育程度、家庭收入、孩子年龄、养育行为以及其他母婴物质使用情况。
一个生长混合模型揭示了五种吸烟模式:不常吸/不吸(39%)、产后戒烟者(5%)、后期戒烟者(7%)、吸烟可能性增加者(17%)和长期吸烟者(32%)。在控制了显著协变量后,与不常吸/不吸组母亲的青少年后代相比,产后戒烟可能性为产后戒烟者和吸烟可能性增加者组母亲的后代更有可能吸烟。
这是第一项研究从孕期到产后16年母亲吸烟轨迹的研究,将母亲产前和产后的吸烟模式与青少年后代的吸烟情况联系起来。我们的研究结果突出了产前暴露相关的风险,因为孕期吸烟但在产后6年戒烟的母亲,其后代吸烟的可能性仍然是非/不常吸烟者后代的3.5倍。
这是第一项研究从孕期到产后16年母亲吸烟轨迹的研究,并将产前和产后的吸烟模式与青少年后代的吸烟情况联系起来。我们确定了两种与16岁后代吸烟相关的母亲长期吸烟模式,其中一种是后代在产前暴露,但产后接触母亲吸烟的可能性要小得多。我们的研究结果突出了后代吸烟产前暴露相关的风险,即使母亲在产后戒烟。