Women who smoke during
pregnancy may be putting their children at increased risk for conduct problems
in childhood, researchers found.
Across three different
studies, children whose mothers smoked during pregnancy -- whether they were
reared by their genetically-related mother or an adoptive mother -- had higher
mean scores on measures of conduct problems compared with children whose birth
mothers did not smoke during pregnancy, according to Gordon Harold, PhD, of the
University of Leicester in England, and colleagues.
In the two studies that included children raised by their
genetically-related mothers, there was a positive association with number of
cigarettes smoked per day and conduct problem scores among genetically-related
children (P<0.001
and P=0.005), they
wrote online in JAMA Psychiatry.
In the two studies (including one from the previous pair) that
included children adopted at birth and raised by genetically-unrelated mothers
-- but whose birth mothers smoked during pregnancy -- researchers found a
positive association between conduct problem scores and the number of
cigarettes that their genetically-related mothers smoked daily while pregnant (P=0.007 and P=0.04).
Prior studies have
shown a relationship between children's conduct disorders and prenatal smoking
in mothers, although that research did not separate prenatal environmental
influences from genetic and postnatal environmental factors.
Past research also has
shown a relationship between smoking
while pregnant and a child's hearing loss and obesity in the offspring.
The authors studied the
relationship between genetically-related mothers' smoking while pregnant with
their children's conduct disorders in three studies of 1,088, 310, and 636
children, respectively, raised by genetically-related or -unrelated mothers.
The first study -- the
Christchurch Health and Development Study -- was a longitudinal birth cohort in
New Zealand that assessed maternal smoking during pregnancy and child behavior
until age 7.
The second study -- the
Early Growth and Development Study -- was a U.S., ongoing, longitudinal,
multisite study of adopted children and parents, as well as birth parents.
Birth parent data were used to assess maternal smoking, while adoptive parent
data were used to assess the child's home environment.
The third study -- the
Cardiff In-Vitro Fertilization (IVF) study -- was an English study of children
conceived through reproductive technologies such as homologous IVF,
single-parent IVF, and embryo donation, where authors focused only on children
born through maternal IVF.
Conduct problems were
reported by mothers and teachers in the Christchurch study, by adoptive mothers
and fathers in the Early Growth study, and by mothers and fathers in the IVF
study.
Neonatal maternal
smoking was reported retrospectively in each study.
Outcomes were adjusted
for child sex, birth weight, race, placement age, breastfeeding, maternal
education, maternal age at birth, family breakdown, parenting practices, and
family socioeconomic status.
Parenting practices
were assessed through measures of maternal emotional responsiveness and
avoidance of restriction, and punishment and hostility.
Maternal smoking habits
were broken down into zero cigarettes daily, one to nine cigarettes daily, and
10 or more cigarettes daily.
The prevalence of
smoking varied by study. The New Zealand study had a prenatal smoking
prevalence of 50% among children raised by genetically-unrelated mothers and
32.7% by those raised by their birth mothers. In the U.S. sample, smoking was
common to 40.8% of pregnant mothers. The English study had a prevalence of 5.7%
of smoking mothers who raised their children, and 3.9% of smoking mothers whose
children were raised by others.
Although rates of conduct problems differed between studies,
associations between maternal smoking and child behavior problems were
significant in each. However, there was no significant relation between
maternal smoking and behavior issues in children born through embryo donation (P=0.98).
An accompanying
editorial by Theodore Slotkin, PhD, of Duke University Medical Center, noted
that "There is little doubt that at least one component of tobacco smoke,
nicotine, is sufficient to disrupt brain development and to evoke subsequent
behavioral abnormalities" in prior research, and that the current study
clearly shows that the effects seen in animal models are replicated in humans.
The model used in this
literature should inform future studies into toxicants responsible for
neurodevelopmental disorders related to cigarette smoke, Slotkin added.
The authors found their
study was limited by the small number of genetically-unrelated smokers in the
English study, as was the prevalence of maternal smoking during pregnancy among
those genetically-related mothers. The study was also limited by a lack of data
on co-exposure to other drugs or alcohol, use of self-reported smoking data,
and lack of time-specific data on smoking and other behaviors and exposures.
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