Husby Anders, Jakobsen Kim D, Wohlfahrt Jan, Melbye Mads
Department of Epidemiology and Biostatistics, School of Public Health, Faculty of Medicine, Imperial College London, London, United Kingdom.
Department of Epidemiology Research, Statens Serum Institut, Copenhagen, Denmark.
PLoS Med. 2025 Jun 24;22(6):e1004657. doi: 10.1371/journal.pmed.1004657. eCollection 2025 Jun.
Maternal infections are common during pregnancy, but it is unclear how they impact the cognitive outcome of the offspring, with many studies suggesting adverse effects. Using long-term follow-up of a nationwide sibling cohort in Denmark with information on maternal antimicrobial prescriptions in community pharmacies and in-patient hospitalizations for infection, we aimed to estimate the effect of maternal infections during pregnancy on offspring school grades and intelligence test results in adolescence.
From population-based national registries we defined a cohort of all full-siblings, born from January 1, 1996 to December 31, 2,003 in Denmark, and linked them to maternal filled prescription for antimicrobial pharmaceuticals and maternal hospitalizations for infection during pregnancy. Standardized examination grades in language and mathematics at the final year of compulsory schooling, in addition to intelligence test scores (calculated as IQ) for a nested sub-cohort of full brothers, were used as outcomes. Among 274,166 children in the full-sibling cohort, 80,817 (29.5%) had a mother who during her pregnancy filled a prescription for a systemic antimicrobial, while 5,628 (2.1%) had a mother who during her pregnancy was hospitalized due to an infection. We found no consistent difference in school grades in language (z-score difference, 0.0, 95% confidence interval [CI] [-0.0,0.0]; p = 0.920) and mathematics (z-score difference, -0.0, 95% CI [-0.0,-0.0]; p = 0.042), and in IQ (IQ-difference, 0.3, 95% CI [-0.2,0.7]; p = 0.217), in children whose mother filled one antimicrobial prescription compared with children whose mother did not fill any, when taking shared family factors into account, while many associations were consistently significant when not taking shared family factors into account. Furthermore, we found no indication of an impact of maternal in-patient hospitalizations for infections during pregnancy on school grades (z-score difference for language, -0.0, 95% CI [-0.1,0.0]; p = 0.103; z-score difference for mathematics, 0.0, 95% CI [-0.0,0.0]; p = 0.809) or IQ (IQ-difference, 0.4, 95% CI [-0.8,1.6]; p = 0.545), when also taking shared family factors into account. Similar findings were found when considering infections in bi-weekly exposure periods during gestation. The main limitations of the study were lacking information on within hospital pharmaceutical prescriptions and the underlying pathogenic microorganisms.
Our study does not support major effects of common maternal infections during pregnancy on offspring cognitive outcomes, and support the safety of commonly prescribed antimicrobials during pregnancy with respect to the long-term cognitive outcomes of the offspring.
孕期母体感染很常见,但目前尚不清楚它们如何影响后代的认知结果,许多研究表明存在不良影响。我们利用丹麦全国同胞队列的长期随访数据,这些数据包含社区药房的母体抗菌药物处方信息以及住院感染信息,旨在评估孕期母体感染对后代青春期学业成绩和智力测试结果的影响。
我们从基于人群的国家登记处确定了一个队列,该队列包含1996年1月1日至2003年12月31日在丹麦出生的所有全同胞,并将他们与母体在孕期开具的抗菌药物处方以及孕期因感染而住院的信息相关联。义务教育最后一年的语言和数学标准化考试成绩,以及一个全兄弟嵌套子队列的智力测试分数(以智商计算)被用作研究结果。在全同胞队列的274,166名儿童中,80,817名(29.5%)的母亲在孕期开具了全身性抗菌药物处方,而5,628名(2.1%)的母亲在孕期因感染而住院。在考虑家庭共同因素的情况下,与母亲未开具任何抗菌药物处方的儿童相比,母亲开具一张抗菌药物处方的儿童在语言(z分数差异为0.0,95%置信区间[CI][-0.0,0.0];p = 0.920)、数学(z分数差异为 -0.0,95% CI [-0.0,-0.0];p = 0.042)以及智商(智商差异为0.3,95% CI [-0.2,0.7];p = 0.217)方面没有发现一致的差异,而在不考虑家庭共同因素时,许多关联结果具有显著意义。此外,在考虑家庭共同因素的情况下,我们也未发现孕期母体因感染住院对学业成绩(语言z分数差异为 -0.0,95% CI [-0.1,0.0];p = 0.103;数学z分数差异为0.0,95% CI [-0.0,0.0];p = 0.809)或智商(智商差异为0.4,95% CI [-0.8,1.6];p = 0.545)有影响。在考虑孕期每两周暴露期的感染情况时也发现了类似的结果。该研究的主要局限性在于缺乏医院内药品处方信息以及潜在致病微生物的信息。
我们的研究不支持孕期常见母体感染对后代认知结果有重大影响,并支持孕期常用抗菌药物在后代长期认知结果方面的安全性。