- Jean A. Frazier, MD
- Xiuhong Li, MAS
- Xiangrong Kong, PhD
- Karl C.K. Kuban, MD
- T. Michael O’Shea, MD, MPH
- on behalf ofprogram collaborators for Environmental influences on Child Health Outcomes
- Show all authors
Published:May 16, 2023DOI:https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jaac.2023.05.010
ABSTRACT
Objective
In this cohort study, we assessed perinatal factors known to be related to maternal and neonatal inflammation and hypothesized several would be associated with emotional, cognitive, and behavioral dysregulation in youth.
Method
The Environmental Influences on Child Health Outcomes is a research consortium of 69 pediatric longitudinal cohorts. We used a subset of 18 cohorts that had both Child Behavior Checklist (CBCL) data on children (6-18 years) and information on perinatal exposures including maternal prenatal infections. Children were classified as having the CBCL dysregulation profile (CBCL-DP) if the sum of their T-Scores for three CBCL subscales (attention, anxious/depressed, and aggression) was ≥ 180. Perinatal factors associated with maternal and/or neonatal inflammation were our primary exposures and we assessed associations between these and our outcome.
Results
Approximately 13.4 % of 4,595 youth met criteria for the CBCL-DP. Boys were affected more than girls (15.1% vs 11.5%). More youth with the CBCL-DP (35%) were born to mothers with prenatal infection(s), compared to 28% of youth without the CBCL-DP. Adjusted odds ratios indicated the following were significantly associated with dysregulation: having a first degree relative with a psychiatric disorder, being born to a mother with lower educational attainment, who was obese, had any prenatal infection and/or who smoked tobacco during pregnancy.
Conclusion
In this large study, a few modifiable maternal risk factors with established roles in inflammation (maternal lower education, obesity, prenatal infections, and smoking) were strongly associated with the CBCL-DP and could be targets for interventions to improve offspring’s behavioral outcomes.
https://www.jaacap.org/article/S0890-8567(23)00248-4/fulltext