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孕期母体感染与瑞典儿童自闭症和智力障碍的可能性:一项阴性对照和同胞比较队列研究。

Maternal infection during pregnancy and likelihood of autism and intellectual disability in children in Sweden: a negative control and sibling comparison cohort study.

机构信息

Department of Global Public Health, Karolinska Institutet, Stockholm, Sweden.

Department of Global Public Health, Karolinska Institutet, Stockholm, Sweden.

出版信息

Lancet Psychiatry. 2022 Oct;9(10):782-791. doi: 10.1016/S2215-0366(22)00264-4. Epub 2022 Sep 7.

Abstract

BACKGROUND

Maternal infections during pregnancy are associated with intellectual disability and autism in exposed children. Whether these associations are causal, and therefore should be targets of preventive strategies, remains unknown. We aimed to investigate these associations, to determine whether there is a causal role of maternal infection during pregnancy for children's risk of autism and intellectual disability, by accounting for unmeasured familial factors.

METHODS

We used a register-based cohort study design, and included children living in Stockholm County, Sweden, who were born in 1987-2010. We excluded children not born in Sweden, adopted children, and children with unknown biological mothers or fathers. Maternal infections during pregnancy, defined by ICD-8, ICD-9, and ICD-10 codes, were identified in the National Patient Register and Medical Birth Register. Children were followed up from birth to an outcome or a censoring event (death, migration from Stockholm, age 18 years, or Dec 31, 2016, whichever occurred first). The primary outcomes were diagnosis of autism or diagnosis of intellectual disability. We did a survival analysis to examine the association between inpatient and outpatient specialised care for any infection during pregnancy and likelihood of autism or intellectual disability in the child. To address potential residual confounding, we also estimated the relationship between maternal infection in the year preceding pregnancy as a negative control exposure and conducted a matched sibling analysis of sibling pairs who were discordant for autism or intellectual disability.

FINDINGS

647 947 children living in Stockholm County were identified and, after excluding 97 980 children, we included 549 967 in the study (267 995 [48·7%] were female and 281 972 [51·3%] were male; mean age at censoring 13·5 years [SD 5·0; range <1 to 18]; 142 597 [25·9%] had a mother who was not born in Sweden). 445 (1·3%) of 34 013 children exposed to maternal infection during pregnancy were diagnosed with intellectual disability and 1123 (3·3%) with autism. 5087 (1·0%) of 515 954 unexposed children were diagnosed with intellectual disability and 13 035 (2·5%) with autism. Maternal infection during pregnancy was associated with autism (hazard ratio [HR] 1·16, 95% CI 1·09-1·23) and intellectual disability (1·37, 1·23-1·51) in exposed children compared with unexposed children. Maternal infection in the year before pregnancy (negative control exposure) was also associated with autism (HR 1·25, 95% CI 1·14-1·36), but was not associated with intellectual disability (1·09, 0·94-1·27). In sibling comparisons, the associations with maternal infection during pregnancy were attenuated for autism (HR 0·94, 95% CI 0·82-1·08; n=21 864), but not to the same extent for intellectual disability (1·15, 0·95-1·40; n=9275).

INTERPRETATION

Although infections in pregnant women are associated with both autism and intellectual disability in their children, the association with autism does not appear to reflect a causal relationship, but is more likely to be explained by factors shared between family members such as genetic variation or aspects of the shared environment. Thus, infection prevention is not expected to reduce autism incidence. For intellectual disability, unmeasured familial factors might not fully explain the observed associations, and a causal role of maternal infections cannot be excluded. Causal effects of specific but rare infections or infections not requiring health care contact cannot be excluded in either autism or intellectual disability.

FUNDING

Swedish Research Council, Stanley Medical Research Institute, and Autism Speaks.

TRANSLATION

For the Swedish translation of the abstract see Supplementary Materials section.

摘要

背景

孕妇感染与暴露儿童的智力残疾和自闭症有关。这些关联是否具有因果关系,因此是否应该成为预防策略的目标,目前尚不清楚。我们旨在调查这些关联,以确定在考虑未测量的家族因素的情况下,妊娠期间母体感染是否会导致儿童自闭症和智力残疾的风险。

方法

我们使用基于登记的队列研究设计,纳入了 1987 年至 2010 年期间出生于瑞典斯德哥尔摩县的儿童。我们排除了非在瑞典出生、被收养的儿童,以及其亲生母亲或父亲身份不明的儿童。通过国家患者登记处和医疗出生登记处,用 ICD-8、ICD-9 和 ICD-10 编码确定了妊娠期间的母体感染。从出生到结局或截止日期(死亡、从斯德哥尔摩迁移、18 岁或 2016 年 12 月 31 日,以先发生者为准)对儿童进行随访。主要结局是自闭症或智力残疾的诊断。我们进行了生存分析,以检查妊娠期间住院和门诊特殊护理的感染与儿童自闭症或智力残疾的可能性之间的关联。为了解决潜在的残余混杂因素,我们还估计了母亲在怀孕前一年感染作为负对照暴露与自闭症或智力残疾的同胞对之间的匹配兄弟姐妹分析的关系。

结果

确定了居住在斯德哥尔摩县的 647947 名儿童,排除了 97980 名儿童后,我们纳入了 549967 名儿童(267995[48.7%]为女性,281972[51.3%]为男性;截止时的平均年龄为 13.5 岁[SD 5.0;范围<1 至 18];142597[25.9%]的母亲非瑞典出生)。34013 名暴露于妊娠期间母体感染的儿童中有 445 名(1.3%)被诊断为智力残疾,1123 名(3.3%)被诊断为自闭症。515947 名未暴露于感染的儿童中有 5087 名(1.0%)被诊断为智力残疾,13035 名(2.5%)被诊断为自闭症。与未暴露的儿童相比,妊娠期间母体感染与自闭症(危险比[HR]1.16,95%CI 1.09-1.23)和智力残疾(1.37,1.23-1.51)相关。母亲在怀孕前一年的感染(负对照暴露)也与自闭症(HR 1.25,95%CI 1.14-1.36)相关,但与智力残疾无关(1.09,0.94-1.27)。在兄弟姐妹比较中,妊娠期间母体感染与自闭症的关联减弱(HR 0.94,95%CI 0.82-1.08;n=21864),但与智力残疾的关联没有减弱(1.15,0.95-1.40;n=9275)。

解释

尽管孕妇感染与子女的自闭症和智力残疾有关,但自闭症与感染的关联似乎并不反映因果关系,而更可能是由家庭成员之间的共同因素(如遗传变异或共享环境方面)解释的。因此,预防感染预计不会降低自闭症的发病率。对于智力残疾,未测量的家族因素可能无法完全解释观察到的关联,也不能排除母体感染的因果作用。在自闭症或智力残疾中,也不能排除特定但罕见的感染或不需要医疗保健接触的感染的因果作用。

资金

瑞典研究理事会、斯坦利医学研究所和自闭症协会。

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