| Literature DB >> 17587444 |
Anita Thapar1, Gordon Harold, Frances Rice, XiaoJia Ge, Jacky Boivin, Dale Hay, Marianne van den Bree, Allyson Lewis.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: There is much evidence to suggest that risk for common clinical disorders begins in foetal life. Exposure to environmental risk factors however is often not random. Many commonly used indices of prenatal adversity (e.g. maternal gestational stress, gestational diabetes, smoking in pregnancy) are influenced by maternal genes and genetically influenced maternal behaviour. As mother provides the baby with both genes and prenatal environment, associations between prenatal risk factors and offspring disease maybe attributable to true prenatal risk effects or to the "confounding" effects of genetic liability that are shared by mother and offspring. Cross-fostering designs, including those that involve embryo transfer have proved useful in animal studies. However disentangling these effects in humans poses significant problems for traditional genetic epidemiological research designs.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2007 PMID: 17587444 PMCID: PMC1913535 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2288-7-25
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med Res Methodol ISSN: 1471-2288 Impact factor: 4.615
Figure 1Genetic and environmental pathways between a prenatal risk factor and child outcome using the example of exposure to gestational stress and childhood anxiety.
Current and target sample in each conception group
| Current sample size | Target sample size | |
| Homologous IVF | 378 | 300 |
| Sperm donation | 170 | 200 |
| Embryo donation | 31 | 50 |
| Egg donation | 146 | 200 |
| Gestational Surrogacy | 16 | 30 |
Genetic relationship between the woman who undergoes the pregnancy and offspring in each conception group and predicted patterns of association between prenatal risk factor X and outcome Y for a) environmentally mediated and b) genetically mediated effects.
| Association between X and Y | |||
| Genetic relationship Between pregnant woman and offspring | Environmental Mediation | Genetic Mediation | |
| Homologous IVF | Yes | yes | yes |
| Sperm donation | Yes | yes | yes |
| Embryo donation | No | yes | no |
| Egg donation | No | yes | no |
| Gestational Surrogacy | No | yes | no |
Examples of rates of exposure to pre and peri-natal risk factors in all conception groups
| Homologous IVF | Sperm donation | Egg donation | Embryo donation | Gestational surrogacy | Total | |
| High blood pressure during pregnancy requiring hospitalisation | 40 (10.8%) | 22 (13.1%) | 37 (26.1%) | 5 (17.2%) | 1 (6.7%) | 105 (14.5%) |
| High blood sugar during pregnancy | 21 (6.0%) | 10 (6.0%) | 15 (10.7%) | 0 -- | 2 (13.3%) | 48 (6.8%) |
| Cigarette smoking during pregnancy | 25 (6.8%) | 7 (4.2%) | 4 (2.8%) | 3 (10.3%) | 1 (7.1%) | 40 (5.5%) |
| Alcohol during pregnancy | 89 (24.1%) | 46 (27.4%) | 34 (23.8%) | 3 (10%) | 3 (21.4%) | 175 (24.1%) |
| Multiple birth | 76 (20.1%) | 45 (24.1%) | 35 (24.1%) | 6 (19.4%) | 6 (37.5%) | 168 (22.7%) |
| Low infant birth weight a | 55 (14.7%) | 33 (19.6%) | 34 (23.4%) | 5 (16.7%) | 6 (40%) | 133 (18.2%) |
| Low infant birth weight a (excluding multiple births) | 20 (6.7%) | 10 (8.0%) | 15 (13.6%) | 3 (12.5%) | 1 (11.1%) | 49 (8.6%) |
a low birth weight is defined as 2500 grams or less
-- percentage not calculable
Maternal and paternal age at child birth for all conception groups
| Homologous IVF | Sperm donation | Egg donation | Embryo donation | Gestational surrogacy | Total | |
| Mean | Mean | Mean | Mean | Mean | Mean | |
| Maternal age at birth of child | 34.14 | 33.88 | 37.88 | 41.23 | 36.07 | 35.15 |
| 3.53 | 3.82 | 5.89 | 6.21 | 5.34 | 4.74 | |
| 25, 45 | 25, 43 | 23, 55 | 30, 54 | 27, 47 | 23, 55 | |
| Paternal age at birth of child | 36.84 | 38.73 | 38.78 | 45.61 | 38.00 | 38.01 |
| 5.84 | 7.02 | 6.64 | 7.02 | 6.47 | 6.57 | |
| 23, 71 | 27, 60 | 24, 58 | 34, 62 | 27, 53 | 23, 71 |