Department of Psychiatry, Massachusetts General Hospital and Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA, United States of America.
Massachusetts General Hospital Biostatistics Center, Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, MA, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2021 Apr 28;16(4):e0250235. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0250235. eCollection 2021.
Numerous adverse prenatal exposures have been individually associated with risk for psychiatric illness in the offspring. However, such exposures frequently co-occur, raising questions about their cumulative impact. We evaluated effects of cumulative adverse prenatal exposure burden on psychopathology risk in school-aged children.
Using baseline surveys from the U.S.-based Adolescent Brain and Cognitive Development (ABCD) Study (7,898 non-adopted, unrelated children from 21 sites, age 9-10, and their primary caregivers), we examined 8 retrospectively-reported adverse prenatal exposures in relation to caregiver-reported total and subscale Child Behavior Checklist (CBCL) scores. We also assessed cumulative effects of these factors on CBCL total as a continuous measure, as well as on odds of clinically significant psychopathology (CBCL total ≥60), in both the initial set and a separate ABCD sample comprising an additional 696 sibling pairs. Analyses were conducted before and after adjustment for 14 demographic and environmental covariates.
In minimally and fully adjusted models, 6 exposures (unplanned pregnancy; maternal alcohol, marijuana, and tobacco use early in pregnancy; pregnancy complications; and birth complications) independently associated with significant but small increases in CBCL total score. Among these 6, none increased the odds of crossing the threshold for clinically significant symptoms by itself. However, odds of exceeding this threshold became significant with 2 exposures (OR = 1.86, 95% CI 1.47-2.36), and increased linearly with each level of exposure (OR = 1.39, 95% CI 1.31-1.47), up to 3.53-fold for ≥4 exposures versus none. Similar effects were observed in confirmatory analysis among siblings. Within sibling pairs, greater discordance for exposure load associated with greater CBCL total differences, suggesting that results were not confounded by unmeasured family-level effects.
Children exposed to multiple common, adverse prenatal events showed dose-dependent increases in broad, clinically significant psychopathology at age 9-10. Fully prospective studies are needed to confirm and elaborate upon this pattern.
大量不良的产前暴露已被单独关联到后代患精神疾病的风险。然而,这些暴露经常同时发生,这引发了关于其累积影响的问题。我们评估了累积不良产前暴露负担对学龄儿童精神病理学风险的影响。
使用来自美国的青少年大脑与认知发展(ABCD)研究(来自 21 个地点的 7898 名非领养、无亲缘关系的 9-10 岁儿童及其主要照顾者的基线调查),我们研究了 8 种回顾性报告的不良产前暴露与照顾者报告的儿童行为检查表(CBCL)总分和子量表分数之间的关系。我们还评估了这些因素对 CBCL 总分作为连续测量值以及对临床显著精神病理学(CBCL 总分≥60)的累积影响,在初始样本和包含另外 696 对兄弟姐妹的单独 ABCD 样本中都进行了评估。分析在调整了 14 项人口统计学和环境协变量之前和之后进行。
在最小和完全调整的模型中,有 6 种暴露(意外怀孕;母亲在妊娠早期饮酒、吸食大麻和吸烟;妊娠并发症;和分娩并发症)与 CBCL 总分的显著但较小的增加独立相关。在这 6 种暴露中,没有一种单独增加越过临床显著症状阈值的几率。然而,当有 2 种暴露时,这种几率变得显著(OR=1.86,95%CI 1.47-2.36),并且随着暴露水平的增加而呈线性增加(OR=1.39,95%CI 1.31-1.47),与没有暴露的情况相比,最高可达 3.53 倍。在兄弟姐妹的确认性分析中也观察到了类似的效果。在兄弟姐妹对中,暴露负荷的差异与 CBCL 总分的差异更大相关,这表明结果不受未测量的家庭水平效应的混淆。
暴露于多种常见不良产前事件的儿童在 9-10 岁时表现出与广泛的、临床显著的精神病理学相关的剂量依赖性增加。需要进行完全前瞻性研究来证实和详细说明这种模式。