| Literature DB >> 31600325 |
Samantha J Lee1, Lianne J Woodward2, Jacqueline M T Henderson1.
Abstract
Recent research shows that preschool children born to opioid-dependent mothers are at increased risk for cognitive, psychomotor, attention, and social-emotional adjustment problems. But very little is known about their school-age functioning, particularly their educational achievement. This analysis examined the educational outcomes of a regional cohort of 100 prenatally methadone-exposed children who were prospectively studied from birth to age 9.5 years alongside a comparison group of 110 randomly identified non-exposed children born between 2003 and 2008. At age 9.5, as part of a comprehensive neurodevelopmental evaluation, children's teachers rated their achievement across the school curriculum, and children completed the Woodcock Johnson-III Tests of Achievement (WJ-III). Detailed information about the birth mother's social background, pregnancy substance use, and mental health was also collected during pregnancy/at term. Infant clinical data were collected after birth. Methadone-exposed children performed less well than non-exposed children across seven school curriculum areas rated by teachers (ps ≤.001), performed less well than non-exposed children on all reading and mathematics subtests of the WJ-III, and had higher rates of any educational delay on the WJ-III (57% vs. 15%), OR = 7.47 (3.71-15.02). Results were similar when children with severe intellectual impairment were excluded. After adjusting for confounding factors, methadone-exposed children had increased odds of educational delay, but this was only marginally significant (OR = 3.62, [1.01-13.01], p = .049). Maternal educational attainment level (OR = 0.69, [0.50-0.89], p = .006), and maternal benzodiazepine use during pregnancy (OR = 2.70 [1.03-7.12], p = .044) were also associated with later educational risk. Findings suggest that children born to opioid-dependent women enrolled in methadone maintenance are at high risk of educational delay by age 9.5 years. Children's academic difficulties appeared to reflect the effects of both adverse prenatal exposures and postnatal social risk.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31600325 PMCID: PMC6786534 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0223685
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Sample characteristics.
| Methadone | Comparison | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Maternal prenatal substance use | |||
| | 64.49 (32.40) | - | - |
| | 6.02 (2.44) | 0.80 (1.11) | < .001 |
| % any cigarette use | 91 | 16 | < .001 |
| % any cannabis use | 52 | 1 | < .001 |
| % any benzodiazepine use | 53 | 1 | < .001 |
| % any anti-depressant use | 33 | 25 | 0.33 |
| % any alcohol use | 21 | 19 | 0.88 |
| % any illicit opioid use | 26 | - | - |
| % any stimulant use | 21 | - | - |
| Maternal social background at term | |||
| | 2.56 (0.96) | 0.76 (1.23) | < .001 |
| % low family SES | 93 | 24 | < .001 |
| % left school without qualifications | 82 | 17 | < .001 |
| % single parent (not married or cohabiting) | 52 | 10 | < .001 |
| % young mother (< 21 years) | 4 | 5 | 0.89 |
| % ethnic minority | 26 | 19 | 0.28 |
| | 12.04 (6.48) | 5.11 (4.77) | < .001 |
| Infant characteristics | |||
| | -0.45 (0.75) | 0.15 (0.91) | < .001 |
| | 0.21 (1.14) | 0.95 (1.12) | < .001 |
| | -0.31 (0.88) | 0.22 (0.92) | < .001 |
| | 38.84 (1.7) | 39.19 (1.7) | 0.16 |
| % preterm (<36 weeks) | 9 | 8 | 0.96 |
| % NAS treatment | 87 | - | - |
| % male sex | 58 | 47 | 0.17 |
| Caregiver characteristics at 9.5 year assessment | |||
| % biological mother was primary caregiver | 54 | 99 | < .001 |
| | 45.28 (10.30) | 41.41 (5.40) | .001 |
| % low family SES | 84 | 19 | < .001 |
| % single parent (not married or cohabiting) | 60 | 13 | < .001 |
| % ethnic minority | 18 | 21 | 0.57 |
| Child characteristics | |||
| | 9.64 (0.40) | 9.51 (0.34) | .02 |
| | 93.83 (14.35) | 108.33 (13.88) | < .001 |
Teacher ratings of children’s achievement across the school curriculum.
| School curriculum domain | Methadone | Comparison | Odds ratio | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| % delayed reading | 52 | 14 | < .001 | 6.37 (3.13–12.98) |
| % delayed math | 55 | 16 | < .001 | 6.80 (3.37–13.70) |
| % delayed written language | 65 | 20 | < .001 | 7.64 (3.89–15.01) |
| % delayed expressive language | 33 | 9 | < .001 | 4.71 (2.07–10.76) |
| % delayed health | 31 | 8 | < .001 | 5.08 (2.15–11.98) |
| % delayed art | 33 | 12 | .001 | 3.42 (1.60–7.30) |
| % delayed technology | 30 | 9 | < .001 | 4.22 (1.84–9.67) |
| % delayed physical education | 27 | 16 | .07 | 1.97 (0.95–4.11) |
a One parent did not give permission to contact teacher.
b Two non-ME children’s teachers failed to complete the questionnaire.
c CI = confidence interval.
Performance on the Woodcock-Johnson Tests of Achievement (WJ-III).
| WJ-III domain | Methadone | Comparison | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 87.74 (19.80) | 104.35 (14.35) | < .001 | 0.97 (0.67–1.28) | |
| | 92.11 (19.33) | 108.54 (14.24) | < .001 | 0.98 (0.67–1.29) |
| | 87.56 (18.19) | 100.76 (16.21) | < .001 | 0.77 (0.47–1.07) |
| | 87.21 (15.60) | 99.45 (9.60) | < .001 | 0.96 (0.65–1.27) |
| 86.80 (18.37) | 103.03 (15.42) | < .001 | 0.96 (0.66–1.27) | |
| | 82.14 (17.44) | 98.31 (14.14) | < .001 | 1.03 (0.72–1.34) |
| | 86.85 (14.73) | 97.65 (15.44) | < .001 | 0.72 (0.41–1.02) |
| | 93.06 (17.13) | 106.53 (12.34) | < .001 | 0.91 (0.61–1.21) |
a d = Cohen’s d estimate of effect size,
CI = confidence interval.
Educational delay on the WJ-III.
| WJ-III domain | Methadone | Comparison | Odds ratio | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| % reading delay | 44 | 11 | < .001 | 6.30 (2.94–13.47) |
| % mathematics delay | 45 | 10 | < .001 | 7.35 (3.36–16.07) |
| % any educational delay | 57 | 15 | < .001 | 7.47 (3.71–15.02) |
a CI = confidence interval.
Fig 1Rates of mild and severe reading and mathematics delay amongst methadone-exposed and comparison children.
Fig 2Patterns of co-occurring reading and mathematics delay amongst methadone-exposed and comparison children on the WJ-III.
Summary of Logistic regression analysis for confounding factors associated with educational delay (0 = no delay, 1 = delay).
| Variable | Odds ratio | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Methadone group status | 2.01 (0.36) | < .001 | 7.47 (3.71–15.02) |
| Methadone group status | 1.29 (0.65) | .049 | 3.62 (1.01–13.01) |
| Maternal educational underachievement | -0.40 (0.15) | .006 | 0.69 (0.50–0.89) |
| Prenatal benzodiazepine use | 0.99 (0.49) | .044 | 2.70 (1.03–7.12) |
| Prenatal alcohol use | 0.90 (0.47) | .052 | 2.47 (0.99–6.15) |
| Prenatal cigarette use | -0.51 (0.60) | .391 | 0.60 (0.19–1.93) |
| Prenatal cannabis use | -0.28 (0.49) | .571 | 0.76 (0.29–1.98) |
| Maternal depression score at term | -0.02 (0.03) | .626 | 0.99 (0.93–1.05) |