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Associations between community-level patterns of prenatal alcohol and tobacco exposure on brain structure in a non-clinical sample of 6-year-old children: a South African pilot study

Authors :
Kristina A. Uban
Deborah Jonker
Kirsten A. Donald
Stefanie C. Bodison
Samantha J. Brooks
Eric Kan
Babette Steigelmann
Annerine Roos
Andrew Marshall
Shana Adise
Letitia Butler-Kruger
Brigitte Melly
Katherine L. Narr
Shantanu H. Joshi
Hein J. Odendaal
Elizabeth R. Sowell
Dan J. Stein
Source :
Acta Neuropsychiatrica. :1-10
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
Cambridge University Press (CUP), 2023.

Abstract

The current small study utilised prospective data collection of patterns of prenatal alcohol and tobacco exposure (PAE and PTE) to examine associations with structural brain outcomes in 6-year-olds and served as a pilot to determine the value of prospective data describing community-level patterns of PAE and PTE in a non-clinical sample of children. Participants from the Safe Passage Study in pregnancy were approached when their child was ∼6 years old and completed structural brain magnetic resonance imaging to examine with archived PAE and PTE data (n = 51 children–mother dyads). Linear regression was used to conduct whole-brain structural analyses, with false-discovery rate (FDR) correction, to examine: (a) main effects of PAE, PTE and their interaction; and (b) predictive potential of data that reflect patterns of PAE and PTE (e.g. quantity, frequency and timing (QFT)). Associations between PAE, PTE and their interaction with brain structural measures demonstrated unique profiles of cortical and subcortical alterations that were distinct between PAE only, PTE only and their interactive effects. Analyses examining associations between patterns of PAE and PTE (e.g. QFT) were able to significantly detect brain alterations (that survived FDR correction) in this small non-clinical sample of children. These findings support the hypothesis that considering QFT and co-exposures is important for identifying brain alterations following PAE and/or PTE in a small group of young children. Current results demonstrate that teratogenic outcomes on brain structure differ as a function PAE, PTE or their co-exposures, as well as the pattern (QFT) or exposure.

Details

ISSN :
16015215 and 09242708
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Acta Neuropsychiatrica
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........2fa3f79ef76a913da4ee5be7447d6785
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1017/neu.2022.34