Prenatal substance exposure and child health: Understanding the role of environmental factors, genetics, and brain development

Author:

Gu Zixin12ORCID,Barch Deanna M345ORCID,Luo Qiang26ORCID

Affiliation:

1. National Clinical Research Center for Aging and Medicine at Huashan Hospital, State Key Laboratory of Medical Neurobiology and MOE Frontiers Center for Brain Science, Institutes of Brain Science and Human Phenome Institute, Fudan University , Shanghai 200032 , China

2. MOE Key Laboratory of Computational Neuroscience and Brain-Inspired Intelligence, Institute of Science and Technology for Brain-Inspired Intelligence, Fudan University , Shanghai 200433 , China

3. Department of Psychological and Brain Sciences, Washington University in St Louis , St Louis, MO 63130 , USA {C}%3C!%2D%2D%7C%7CrmComment%7C%7C%3C~show%20%5BAQ%20ID%3DAQ3%20pos%3D%2D%2D1pc%5D~%3E%2D%2D%3E {C}%3C!%2D%2D%7C%7CrmComment%7C%7C%3C~show%20%5BAQ%20ID%3DAQ4%5D~%3E%2D%2D%3E

4. Department of Psychiatry, Washington University in St Louis , St Louis, MO 63110 , USA

5. Department of Radiology, Washington University in St Louis , St Louis, MO 63110 , USA

6. Shanghai Research Center of Acupuncture & Meridian , Shanghai 200433 , China

Abstract

Abstract Prenatal substance exposure (PSE) has been linked to adverse health outcomes, but its interactions with environmental and genetic factors remain unclear. Using data from the adolescent brain cognitive development cohort (n = 9,838; baseline age: 9.92 ± 0.62 years), we tested for the robust associations of PSE-caffeine/alcohol/tobacco/marijuana with children's health, cognition, and brain metrics after controlling for the environmental and genetic contexts. The environmental context involved birth, familial, and societal risk factors, while the genetic context included family histories and polygenic risk scores (PRSs) of mental disorders. In this sample, PSE-caffeine was observed in 59.8%, PSE-alcohol in 25.7%, PSE-tobacco in 13.2%, and PSE-marijuana in 5.6% of children. PSE-tobacco/marijuana was associated with higher environmental risks, PSE-alcohol was associated with lower familial risks, and all PSEs were associated with higher genetic risks. Controlling for these contexts reduced the number of significant health associations by 100, 91, 84, and 18% for PSE-tobacco/marijuana/caffeine/alcohol. Compared to the baseline, PSE-alcohol had the most health associations that were persistent over a 2-year period from preadolescence to adolescence, including associations with more sleep and mental health problems, improved cognitive functions, and larger brain volumes. These persistent associations with mental health problems and crystallized cognition were mediated by the surface areas of the frontal and the parietal cortices, respectively. Lower risk scores of the familial contexts attenuated associations between PSE-alcohol/marijuana and mental health problems. Higher PRS for substance use disorders enhanced late-onset associations of PSE-marijuana with externalizing problems. Results support the “health in context” concept, emphasizing modifiable factors mitigating adverse PSE effects.

Funder

National Key Research and Development Program of China

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Program of Shanghai Academic Research Leader

Shanghai Municipal Science and Technology Major Project

111 Project

University of Sydney

Fudan University BISA Flagship Research Program

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

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