Literature DB >> 24167172

Maternal prenatal weight gain and autism spectrum disorders.

Deborah A Bilder1, Amanda V Bakian, Joseph Viskochil, Erin A S Clark, Elizabeth L Botts, Ken R Smith, Richard Pimentel, William M McMahon, Hilary Coon.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: The rising population of individuals identified with an autism spectrum disorder (ASD) calls for further investigation of its underlying etiology. A disturbance in the fetal steroid hormone environment may be a mechanism in which environmental and genetic risk factors interact. The mother, fetus, and placenta collectively create the fetal steroid environment. Prepregnancy BMI and pregnancy weight gain have served as markers for fetal steroid hormone exposure in other disease states. This study's objective is to determine whether prepregnancy BMI and pregnancy weight gain are associated with increased ASD risk across study designs and cohorts while controlling for important confounding variables.
METHODS: A population-based Utah ASD cohort (n = 128) was ascertained in a 3-county surveillance area and gender- and age-matched to 10,920 control subjects. A second, research-based ASD cohort of Utah children (n = 288) and their unaffected siblings (n = 493) were ascertained through participation in an ASD genetics study. Prenatal variables were obtained from birth certificate records.
RESULTS: ASD risk was significantly associated with pregnancy weight gain (adjusted odds ratio = 1.10, 95% confidence interval: 1.03 to 1.17; adjusted odds ratio = 1.17, 95% confidence interval: 1.01 to 1.35 for each 5 pounds of weight gained), but not prepregnancy BMI, in population and research-based cohorts, respectively. When analyses were restricted to ASD cases with normal IQ, these associations remained significant.
CONCLUSIONS: ASD risk associated with a modest yet consistent increase in pregnancy weight gain suggests that pregnancy weight gain may serve as an important marker for autism's underlying gestational etiology. This justifies an investigation into phenomena that link pregnancy weight gain and ASD independent of prepregnancy BMI.

Entities:  

Keywords:  autism; epidemiology; prenatal; risk factors; weight gain

Mesh:

Year:  2013        PMID: 24167172      PMCID: PMC3813395          DOI: 10.1542/peds.2013-1188

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Pediatrics        ISSN: 0031-4005            Impact factor:   7.124


  35 in total

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5.  Effect of exclusive breastfeeding on the development of children's cognitive function in the Krakow prospective birth cohort study.

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Authors: 
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  45 in total

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2.  Maternal Pre-pregnancy Body Mass Index and Gestational Weight Gain in Relation to Autism Spectrum Disorder and other Developmental Disorders in Offspring.

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4.  Maternal pre-pregnancy weight status and health care use for mental health conditions in the offspring.

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5.  Trajectories of maternal gestational weight gain and child cognition assessed at 5 years of age in a prospective cohort study.

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6.  Prepregnancy obesity is associated with lower psychomotor development scores in boys at age 3 in a low-income, minority birth cohort.

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7.  Maternal prepregnancy body mass index and child psychosocial development at 6 years of age.

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