Maternal infections during pregnancy and child cognitive outcomes.
Authors
Hall, Hildigunnur Anna
Murray, Aja Louise
Lombardo, Michael Vincent
Auyeung, Bonnie
Publication Date
2022-11-17Journal Title
BMC Pregnancy Childbirth
ISSN
1471-2393
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Language
en
Type
Article
This Version
VoR
Metadata
Show full item recordCitation
Kwok, J., Hall, H. A., Murray, A. L., Lombardo, M. V., & Auyeung, B. (2022). Maternal infections during pregnancy and child cognitive outcomes.. BMC Pregnancy Childbirth https://doi.org/10.1186/s12884-022-05188-8
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Maternal prenatal infections have been linked to children's neurodevelopment and cognitive outcomes. It remains unclear, however, whether infections occurring during specific vulnerable gestational periods can affect children's cognitive outcomes. The study aimed to examine maternal infections in each trimester of pregnancy and associations with children's developmental and intelligence quotients. The ALSPAC birth cohort was used to investigate associations between maternal infections in pregnancy and child cognitive outcomes. METHODS: Infection data from mothers and cognition data from children were included with the final study sample size comprising 7,410 mother-child participants. Regression analysis was used to examine links between maternal infections occurring at each trimester of pregnancy and children's cognition at 18 months, 4 years, and 8 years. RESULTS: Infections in the third trimester were significantly associated with decreased verbal IQ at age 4 (p < .05, adjusted R2 = 0.004); decreased verbal IQ (p < .01, adjusted R2 = 0.001), performance IQ (p < .01, adjusted R2 = 0.0008), and total IQ at age 8 (p < .01, adjusted R2 = 0.001). CONCLUSION: Results suggest that maternal infections in the third trimester could have a latent effect on cognitive development, only emerging when cognitive load increases over time, though magnitude of effect appears to be small. Performance IQ may be more vulnerable to trimester-specific exposure to maternal infection as compared to verbal IQ. Future research could include examining potential mediating mechanisms on childhood cognition, such as possible moderating effects of early childhood environmental factors, and if effects persist in future cognitive outcomes.
Keywords
Research Article, Pregnancy, Infections, Cognition, Child development, ALSPAC
Sponsorship
Horizon 2020 Framework Programme (813546)
Identifiers
s12884-022-05188-8, 5188
External DOI: https://doi.org/10.1186/s12884-022-05188-8
This record's URL: https://www.repository.cam.ac.uk/handle/1810/343394
Rights
Licence:
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
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