Pleau Justine, Tanguay Noémie, Courtemanche Yohann, Séguin Jean R, Herba Catherine M, Simard Marie-Noelle, MacLeod Andrea A N, Fraser William D, Muckle Gina
École de psychologie de l'Université Laval, Quebec City, QC, Canada.
CHU de Québec-Université Laval Research Centre, Quebec City, QC, Canada.
Matern Child Health J. 2025 Apr;29(4):549-562. doi: 10.1007/s10995-025-04077-8. Epub 2025 Mar 22.
The objectives of this study are to describe cannabis use during pregnancy, identify associated factors, examine the associations between prenatal cannabis use and the cognitive, motor and language development of 2-year-old children, and determine whether these associations differ according to child sex.
Data from 1489 mother-infant dyads from the 3D prospective pregnancy and birth cohort Study (2010-2012) were used. Prenatal cannabis use was measured during interviews in each trimester of pregnancy. Cognitive and motor development were assessed by The Bayley Scales of Infant and Toddler Development (BSID-III) and language development by the MacArthur-Bates Communicative Development Inventories at 2 years of age. Multiple linear regressions and differential analyses by child sex were performed.
2.6% of women reported using cannabis during pregnancy, the majority of whom stopped after the first trimester. Prenatal cannabis use was associated with lower socioeconomic status, prenatal use of alcohol and tobacco, and more distress symptoms during the first trimester of pregnancy. Results showed no significant associations between prenatal cannabis use (yes/no) and developmental indicators (Cognitive: B = 0.016, 95% CI [-0.268, 0.299]; Fine motor: B = 0.029, 95% CI [-0.271, 0.328]; Gross motor: B = 0.060, 95% CI [-0.143, 0.544]; Language: B = 0.200, 95% CI [-0.229, 0,465]). Contrary to our hypothesis, a positive association between cannabis use and language development was found in girls only.
The study, consisting of a large sample and developmental indicators independent of parental assessment, highlights the need for more studies on prenatal cannabis exposure documented by biomarkers.
本研究的目的是描述孕期大麻使用情况,确定相关因素,研究孕期大麻使用与2岁儿童认知、运动和语言发育之间的关联,并确定这些关联是否因儿童性别而异。
使用了来自三维前瞻性妊娠与出生队列研究(2010 - 2012年)的1489对母婴的数据。在孕期的每个阶段进行访谈时测量孕期大麻使用情况。认知和运动发育通过贝利婴幼儿发育量表(BSID - III)进行评估,语言发育在儿童2岁时通过麦克阿瑟 - 贝茨交流发展量表进行评估。进行了多元线性回归和按儿童性别进行的差异分析。
2.6%的女性报告在孕期使用过大麻,其中大多数在孕早期后停止使用。孕期大麻使用与较低的社会经济地位、孕期酒精和烟草使用以及孕早期更多的痛苦症状相关。结果显示孕期大麻使用(是/否)与发育指标之间无显著关联(认知:B = 0.016,95%可信区间[-0.268, 0.299];精细运动:B = 0.029,95%可信区间[-0.271, 0.328];大运动:B = 0.060,95%可信区间[-0.143, 0.544];语言:B = 0.200,95%可信区间[-0.229, 0.465])。与我们的假设相反,仅在女孩中发现大麻使用与语言发育之间存在正相关。
该研究样本量大且发育指标独立于父母评估,强调了需要更多关于生物标志物记录的孕期大麻暴露的研究。