| Literature DB >> 25644294 |
Steven Moylan1, Kristin Gustavson, Simon Øverland, Evalill Bølstad Karevold, Felice N Jacka, Julie A Pasco, Michael Berk.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Maternal smoking during pregnancy (MSDP) is associated with multiple adverse childhood outcomes including externalizing behaviors. However, the association between MSDP and internalizing (anxiety and depressive) behaviors in offspring has received less investigation. We aimed to assess the association between MSDP and childhood internalizing (anxiety and depressive) behaviors in a very large, well-characterized cohort study.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 25644294 PMCID: PMC4314755 DOI: 10.1186/s12916-014-0257-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med ISSN: 1741-7015 Impact factor: 8.775
Figure 1Study profile. Figure 1 details the data available for each individual analysis performed in the study. Data from a total of 107,379 mother-child pairs was available in the Norwegian Mother and Child Cohort Study at the time of this study, of which 90,040 provided information about maternal smoking during pregnancy. For each model described, the number of mother-child pairs excluded due to missing internalizing symptom information is listed first, followed by the total number of mother-child pairs available for the specific analysis at each time point. Model A represents the unadjusted model. Model B represents the main confounder model adjusted for covariates paternal smoking, maternal alcohol consumption, maternal depressive and anxiety symptoms, maternal age, maternal education level, parity, and gestational age at birth. Dose-response analysis includes controls for Model B covariates. Model C represents the main confounder model in a subsample of mothers who provided information on smoking in past pregnancies. Analyses in Model C include Model B covariates plus adjustment for smoking in previous pregnancies.
Descriptive statistics of exposures, outcomes, and included covariates
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| 29.8 (4.6) |
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| 39.34 (2.26) |
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| 1.26 (0.40) |
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| ≤9 years education | 2,782 (2.6%) |
| 1 to 2 years high schooling | 4,944 (4.6%) |
| 3 years schooling | 26,854 (25.0%) |
| 1 to 4 college/university | 39,388 (36.7%) |
| >4 years college/university | 22,579 (21.0%) |
| Missing | 10,832 (10.1%) |
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| Never | 74,702 (69.6%) |
| <1 episode per month | 8,615 (8.0%) |
| 1 to 3 episodes per month | 1,995 (1.9%) |
| <1 episode per week | 429 (0.4%) |
| 2 to 3 episodes per week | 61 (0.1%) |
| 4 to 5 episodes per week | 7 (0.0%) |
| 6 to 7 episodes per week | 15 (0.0%) |
| Missing data | 21,555 (20.1%) |
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| 0 | 47,515 (44.2%) |
| 1 | 38,188 (35.6%) |
| 2 | 16,443 (15.3%) |
| 3 | 3,610 (3.4%) |
| 4+ | 1,132 (1.1%) |
| Missing data | 492 (0.5%) |
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| Yes | 25,039 (23.3%) |
| No | 76,079 (70.9%) |
| Missing data | 6,261 (5.8%) |
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| 18 months (n = 69,946) | 1.27 (0.25) |
| 36 months (n = 57,143) | 1.25 (0.22) |
| 5 years (n = 19,778) | 1.16 (0.19) |
Internalizing symptoms are drawn from maternal report from a condensed version of the CBCL. Maternal depression and anxiety symptoms are drawn from the HSCL-5.
Correlations between maternal smoking, smoking in previous pregnancies, and internalizing behaviors in children at 18 months, 36 months, and 5 years
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| 1 | ||||||
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| n/a | 1 | |||||
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| 0.840** | 0.822** | 1 | ||||
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| 0.534** | 0.519** | 0.519** | 1 | |||
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| 0.065** | 0.065** | 0.057** | 0.067** | 1 | ||
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| 0.051** | 0.050** | 0.043** | 0.073** | 0.354** | 1 | |
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| 0.031** | 0.039** | 0.029** | 0.051** | 0.272** | 0.404** | 1 |
Internalizing behaviors have been log transformed and standardized. Correlations are Pearson Coefficients. **P <0.001.
Associations between timing of maternal smoking and internalizing behaviors in children at 18 months, 36 months, and 5 years
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| Reference | Reference | Reference |
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| B = 0.20 (SE, 0.04), | B = 0.17 (SE, 0.04), | B = 0.15 (SE, 0.07), |
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| B = 0.11 (SE, 0.05), | B = 0.10 (SE, 0.06), | B = 0.21 (SE, 0.11), |
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| B = 0.19 (SE, 0.02), | B = 0.19 (SE, 0.02), | B = 0.11 (SE, 0.04), |
Maternal non-smokers are the reference group, i.e., each of the three smoking groups is compared to this group in the analyses. Internalizing behaviors have been log transformed and standardized. B coefficients should be interpreted as units of standard deviation difference between each smoking group and non-smokers in the log-transformed scale for internalizing behaviors.
SE, Standard error.
Figure 2Associations between maternal smoking and internalizing behaviors in children at 18 months, 36 months, and 5 years adjusting for Model A, Model B, and Model C covariates. This figure displays the individual B coefficients for associations between maternal smoking during pregnancy and internalizing behaviors at different time points for Models A, B, and C. Associations were discovered at all time points for Model A (unadjusted), and at 18 months and 36 months for Model B (main confounder model). After controlling for smoking in past pregnancies only associations at age 18 months remained significant. The effect sizes decreased as children grew older. Non-smoking mother-child pairs are the reference group. Internalizing behaviors have been log transformed and standardized. B coefficients should be interpreted as units of standard deviation difference in corrected internalizing behaviors between smokers and non-smokers. * Model A: Unadjusted model. † Model B: Main confounder model adjusted for paternal smoking, maternal alcohol consumption, maternal depressive and anxiety symptoms, maternal age, maternal education level, parity, and gestational age at birth. ‡ Model C: Main confounder model in subsample of mothers, Model B plus adjustment for smoking in previous pregnancies. For Model A, ratio of smokers to non-smokers was 4,663/57,456, 3,728/46,495 and 1,167/17,988 for analysis at time points 18 months, 36 months, and 5 years, respectively. For Model B, the ratio of smokers to non-smokers was 3,829/46,986, 3,072/38,268, and 960/14,800 for analysis at time points 18 months, 36 months, and 5 years, respectively. For Model C, the ratio of smokers to non-smokers was 2,717/30,052, 2,157/24,229, and 663/9,620 for analysis at time points 18 months, 36 months, and 5 years, respectively.
Figure 3Associations between different daily maternal cigarette consumption and internalizing behaviors in children at 18 months, 36 months, and 5 years. This figure displays the individual B coefficients for associations between different daily rates of maternal smoking during prgnancy and internalizing behaviors at different time points adjusted for Model B covariates. Associations were discovered for all rates of smoking at 18 months. Non-smoking mother-child pairs are the reference group. Internalizing behaviors have been log transformed and standardized. B coefficients should be interpreted as units of standard deviation difference in corrected internalizing behaviors between smokers and non-smokers. All analyses adjusted for Model B covariates paternal smoking, maternal alcohol consumption, maternal depressive and anxiety symptoms, maternal age, maternal education level, parity, and gestational age at birth. Reported n’s are numbers of smokers at each time point in that smoking category. N’s for maternal non-smokers were 46,986, 38,268, and 14,800 at time points 18 months, 36 months, and 5 years, respectively.