Prenatal substance exposure, early‐life adversity, and parenting: Associations with adolescent stress response

Author:

Eiden Rina D.1ORCID,Ettekal Idean2,Zhao Junru3,Kelm Madison R.1,Nickerson Amanda B.345,Ostrov Jamie M.3,Schuetze Pamela4ORCID,Godleski Stephanie6

Affiliation:

1. Department of Psychology and The Social Science Research Institute The Pennsylvania State University State College Pennsylvania USA

2. Department of Educational Psychology Texas A&M University College Station Texas USA

3. Department of Psychology University at Buffalo, The State University of New York Buffalo New York USA

4. Department of Psychology Buffalo State, The State University of New York Buffalo New York USA

5. Alberti Center for Bullying Abuse Prevention University at Buffalo, State University of New York Buffalo New York USA

6. Department of Psychology Rochester Institute of Technology Rochester New York USA

Abstract

AbstractWe tested a conceptual model examining associations between prenatal substance exposure and adolescent cortisol reactivity profiles in response to an acute social evaluative stressor. We included cortisol reactivity in infancy, and direct and interactive effects of early‐life adversity and parenting behaviors (sensitivity, harshness) from infancy to early school age on adolescent cortisol reactivity profiles in model testing. Participants were 216 families (51% female children; 116 cocaine‐exposed) recruited at birth, oversampled for prenatal substance exposure, and assessed from infancy to early adolescence (EA). Majority of participants self‐identified as Black (72% mothers, 57.2% adolescents), and caregivers were primarily from low‐income families (76%), were single (86%), and had high school or below education (70%) at recruitment. Latent profile analyses identified three cortisol reactivity patterns including elevated (20.4%), moderate (63.1%), and blunted (16.5%) reactivity groups. Prenatal tobacco exposure was associated with higher likelihood of membership in the elevated reactivity compared to the moderate reactivity group. Higher caregiver sensitivity in early life was associated with lower likelihood of membership in the elevated reactivity group. Prenatal cocaine exposure was associated with higher maternal harshness. Interaction effects among early‐life adversity and parenting indicated that caregiver sensitivity buffered, and harshness exacerbated, the likelihood that high early adversity would be associated with the elevated and blunted reactivity groups. Results highlight the potential importance of prenatal alcohol and tobacco exposure for cortisol reactivity and the role of parenting as exacerbating or buffering the impact of early‐life adversity on adolescent stress response.

Funder

National Institute on Drug Abuse

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Behavioral Neuroscience,Developmental Biology,Developmental Neuroscience,Developmental and Educational Psychology

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1. Prenatal Substance Exposure;Annual Review of Developmental Psychology;2023-12-11

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