Department of Pharmacy Practice and Administrative Sciences, Substace Use Research and Education (SURE) Center, College of Pharmacy, University of New Mexico, Albuquerque, NM, USA.
Department of Family and Community Medicine, School of Medicine, University of New Mexico, Albuquerque, NM, USA.
Alcohol Clin Exp Res. 2021 Mar;45(3):543-547. doi: 10.1111/acer.14545. Epub 2021 Feb 2.
Accurate characterization of prenatal alcohol exposure (PAE) is challenging due to inconsistent use of screening questionnaires in routine prenatal care and substantial underreporting due to stigma associated with alcohol use in pregnancy. The aim of this study was to identify self-report tools that are efficient in accurately characterizing PAE.
Participants meeting eligibility criteria for mild-to-moderate PAE were recruited into the University of New Mexico Ethanol, Neurodevelopment, Infant and Child Health cohort (N = 121) and followed prospectively. Timeline follow-back (TLFB) interviews were administered at baseline to capture alcohol use in the periconceptional period and 30 days before enrollment; reported quantity was converted to oz absolute alcohol (AA), multiplied by frequency of use and averaged across 2 TLBF calendars. The interview also included questions about timing and number of drinks at the most recent drinking episode, maximum number of drinks in a 24-hour period since the last menstrual period, and number of drinks on "special occasions" (irrespective of whether these occurred within the TLFB reported period). Continuous measures of alcohol use were analyzed to yield the number of binge episodes by participants who consumed ≥4 drinks/occasion. The proportion of women with ≥1 binge episode was also tabulated for each type of assessment.
Average alcohol consumption was 0.6 ± 1.3 oz of AA/day (≈ 8.4 drinks/wk). Only 3.3% of participants reported ≥1 binge episode on the TLFB, 19.8% had ≥1 binge episode when asked about "special occasions," and 52.1% when asked about the number of drinks the last time they drank alcohol. An even higher prevalence (89.3%) of bingeing was obtained based on the maximum number of drinks consumed in a 24-hour period.
Self-reported quantity of alcohol use varies greatly based on type of questions asked. Brief targeted questions about maximum number of drinks in 24 hours and total number of drinks during the most recent drinking episode provide much higher estimates of alcohol use and thus might be less affected by self-reporting bias.
由于在常规产前护理中筛查问卷使用不一致,以及由于与孕期饮酒相关的耻辱感导致大量漏报,因此准确描述产前酒精暴露(PAE)具有挑战性。本研究的目的是确定能够准确描述 PAE 的自我报告工具。
符合轻度至中度 PAE 入选标准的参与者被招募到新墨西哥大学乙醇、神经发育、婴儿和儿童健康队列(N=121)中,并进行前瞻性随访。基线时进行时间线回溯(TLFB)访谈,以捕获围孕期和入组前 30 天的饮酒情况;报告的数量转换为绝对酒精(AA)盎司数,乘以使用频率并平均 2 个 TLFB 日历。访谈还包括最近一次饮酒时的时间和饮酒量、上次月经以来 24 小时内的最大饮酒量以及“特殊场合”的饮酒量(无论这些场合是否发生在 TLFB 报告期间)。对连续的饮酒量进行分析,得出每个参与者≥4 次/场合的 binge 发作次数。还列出了每种评估方法中≥1 次 binge 发作的女性比例。
平均酒精摄入量为 0.6±1.3 盎司 AA/天(≈8.4 杯/周)。只有 3.3%的参与者在 TLFB 上报告≥1 次 binge 发作,19.8%在询问“特殊场合”时报告≥1 次 binge 发作,52.1%在询问最后一次饮酒时报告饮酒量。根据 24 小时内最大饮酒量, binge 发作的患病率更高(89.3%)。
根据所问问题的类型,自我报告的酒精摄入量差异很大。关于 24 小时内最大饮酒量和最近一次饮酒时总饮酒量的简短针对性问题提供了更高的饮酒量估计值,因此可能受自我报告偏倚的影响较小。