CUNY School of Medicine, United States of America.
Department of Psychiatry, Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, United States of America.
Schizophr Res. 2022 Sep;247:67-83. doi: 10.1016/j.schres.2021.09.020. Epub 2021 Oct 5.
We conducted a systematic review of the published literature to test the hypothesis that maternal exposure to extremes of ambient temperatures during pregnancy is associated with the risk for psychiatric disorders or congenital malformations in offspring, both of which are indicative of perturbations of fetal neurodevelopment.
This study was conducted in accordance with the recommendations outlined in the Meta-analysis of Observational Studies in Epidemiology (MOOSE) reporting proposal. Electronic databases (Ovid MEDLINE, Ovid Embase, Ovid PsycINFO, Ovid Global Health, Web of Science, and Cochrane Library) were searched. Four independent reviewers selected studies with the following criteria: (1) prenatal maternal ambient temperature exposure; (2) outcome of offspring psychiatric disorder or congenital defects; (3) empirical study; (4) full-length article, no conference presentations or abstracts.
Twenty-two studies met criteria and one was added from a reference list (n = 23). Of these, schizophrenia (n = 5), anorexia nervosa (n = 3) and congenital cardiovascular malformations (n = 6) studies were the most common. Each of these categories showed some evidence of association with an early pregnancy maternal ambient heat exposure effect, with other evidence for a late pregnancy cold effect.
Some evidence supports a role for early pregnancy maternal exposure to extreme ambient heat in the development of psychiatric disorders, but large-scale, prospective cohort data on individual births is essential. Optimal studies will be conducted in seasonally variable climates, accounting for actual maternal residence over the pregnancy and at parturition, local environmental temperature records, and appropriate covariates, similar to studies identified by this systematic review for congenital malformations.
我们对已发表的文献进行了系统回顾,以检验以下假设,即在妊娠期间暴露于极端环境温度下的母体与后代的精神障碍或先天畸形风险相关,这两者都表明胎儿神经发育受到干扰。
本研究按照《观察性研究荟萃分析中的 MOOSE 报告建议》的建议进行。电子数据库(Ovid MEDLINE、Ovid Embase、Ovid PsycINFO、Ovid Global Health、Web of Science 和 Cochrane Library)进行了检索。四位独立评审员根据以下标准选择研究:(1)产前母体环境温度暴露;(2)后代精神障碍或先天缺陷的结果;(3)实证研究;(4)全文文章,无会议演示或摘要。
有 22 项研究符合标准,另有一项来自参考文献列表(n=23)。其中,精神分裂症(n=5)、神经性厌食症(n=3)和先天性心血管畸形(n=6)的研究最为常见。这些类别中的每一种都显示出与早期妊娠母体环境热暴露效应相关的一些证据,而其他证据则表明晚期妊娠冷效应。
一些证据支持母体在妊娠早期暴露于极端环境热与精神障碍的发展有关,但需要对个体出生进行大规模、前瞻性队列数据研究。最佳研究将在季节性气候变化的环境中进行,考虑到整个妊娠期间和分娩时的实际母体居住地、当地环境温度记录以及适当的协变量,这与本系统综述确定的先天性畸形研究类似。