PEDIATRICS Vol. 108 No. 2 August 2001, p. e34
ELECTRONIC ARTICLE:
Prenatal Alcohol Exposure and Childhood Behavior at Age 6 to 7 Years: I. Dose-Response Effect
Received Jan 12, 2001; accepted Apr 9, 2001.
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From the * Department of Pediatrics, School of Medicine,
Objective. Moderate to heavy levels
of prenatal alcohol exposure have been associated with alterations in
child behavior, but limited data are available on adverse effects after
low levels of exposure. The objective of this study was to evaluate the
dose-response effect of prenatal alcohol exposure for adverse child
behavior outcomes at 6 to 7 years of age.
Methods. Beginning in 1986, women attending the urban
university-based maternity clinic were routinely screened at their
first prenatal visit for alcohol and drug use by trained research
assistants from the Fetal Alcohol Research Center. All women reporting
alcohol consumption at conception of at least 0.5 oz absolute
alcohol/day and a 5% random sample of lower level drinkers and
abstainers were invited to participate to be able to identify the
associations between alcohol intake and child development. Maternal
alcohol, cigarette, and illicit drug use were prospectively assessed
during pregnancy and postnatally. The independent variable in this
study, prenatal alcohol exposure, was computed as the average absolute alcohol intake (oz) per day across pregnancy. At each
prenatal visit, mothers were interviewed about alcohol use during the
previous 2 weeks. Quantities and types of alcohol consumed were
converted to fluid ounces of absolute alcohol and averaged across
visits to generate a summary measure of alcohol exposure throughout
pregnancy. Alcohol was initially used as a dichotomous variable
comparing children with no prenatal alcohol exposure to children with
any exposure. To evaluate the effects of different levels of exposure, the average absolute alcohol intake was relatively arbitrarily categorized into no, low (>0 but <0.3 fl oz of absolute alcohol/day), and moderate/heavy ( Statistical Analyses. Statistical analyses were performed
using the SPSS statistical package. Frequency distribution,
cross-tabulation, odds ratio, and Results. Testing was available for 501 parent-children
dyads. Almost one fourth of the women denied alcohol use during
pregnancy. Low levels of alcohol use were reported in 63.8% and
moderate/heavy use in 13% of pregnancies. Increasing prenatal alcohol
exposure was associated with lower birth weight and gestational age,
higher lead levels, higher maternal age, and lower education level,
prenatal exposure to cocaine and smoking, custody changes, lower
socioeconomic status, and paternal drinking and drug use at the time of
pregnancy. Children with any prenatal alcohol exposure were more likely
to have higher CBCL scores on Externalizing (Aggressive and Delinquent) and Internalizing (Anxious/Depressed and Withdrawn) syndrome scales and
the Total Problem Score. The odds ratio of scoring in the clinical range for Delinquent behavior was 3.2 (1.3-7.6) in children with any prenatal exposure to alcohol compared with nonexposed controls. The threshold dose was evaluated with the 3 prenatal alcohol
exposure groups. One-way ANOVA revealed a significant between group
difference for Externalizing (Aggressive and Delinquent) and the Total
Problem Score. Posthoc tests revealed the between group differences to
be significant (no and low-exposure group) for Aggressive and
Externalizing behavior suggesting that the adverse effects of prenatal
alcohol exposure on child behavior at age 6 to 7 years are evident even
at low levels of exposure. For Delinquent and Total Problem behavior,
the difference was significant between the no and moderate-heavy
exposure group, suggesting a higher threshold for these behaviors.
Prenatal alcohol exposure remained a significant predictor of behavior
after adjusting for covariates. Although maternal psychopathology was
the most important predictor of behavior, gender was also a significant predictor, with boys having higher scores on Externalizing (Delinquent) and Attention Problems. The amount of variance uniquely accounted for
by prenatal alcohol exposure ranged between 0.6% to 1.7%.
Conclusions. Maternal alcohol consumption even at low
levels was adversely related to child behavior; a dose-response
relationship was also identified. The effect was observed at average
levels of exposure of as low as 1 drink per week. Although effects on
mean scores for Externalizing and Aggressive behaviors were observed at
low levels of prenatal alcohol exposure, effects on Delinquent behavior
and Total Problem Scores were observed at moderate/heavy levels of
exposure. Children with any prenatal alcohol exposure were 3.2 times as
likely to have Delinquent behavior scores in the clinical range
compared with nonexposed children. The relationship between prenatal
alcohol exposure and adverse childhood behavior outcome persisted after
controlling for other factors associated with adverse behavioral
outcomes. Clinicians are often asked by pregnant women if
small amounts of alcohol intake are acceptable during pregnancy. These
data suggest that no alcohol during pregnancy remains the best medical
advice.
College of Nursing, § Center for Healthcare Effectiveness Research,
School of Medicine, and
Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology,
School of Medicine, Wayne State University, Detroit, Michigan.
0.3 fl oz of absolute alcohol/day) for the purpose of this study. Six years later, 665 families were contacted. Ninety-four percent agreed to testing. Exclusions included children who
missed multiple test appointments, had major congenital malformations (other than fetal alcohol syndrome), possessed an IQ >2 standard deviations from the sample mean, or had incomplete data. The Achenbach Child Behavior Checklist (CBCL) was used to assess child behavior. The
CBCL is a parent questionnaire applicable to children ages 4 to
16 years. It is widely used in the clinical assessment of children's behavior problems and has been extensively used in research. Eight syndrome scales are further grouped into
Externalizing or undercontrolled (Aggressive and Delinquent) behavior
and Internalizing or overcontrolled (Anxious/Depressed,
Somatic Complaints, and Withdrawn) behaviors. Three syndromes (Social,
Thought, and Attention Problems) fit neither group. Higher scores are
associated with more problem behaviors. Research assistants who were
trained and blinded to exposure status independently interviewed the
child and caretaker. Data were collected on a broad range of control variables known to influence childhood behavior and/or to be associated with prenatal alcohol exposure. These included perinatal factors of
maternal age, education, cigarette, cocaine, and other substances of
abuse and the gestational age of the baby. Postnatal factors studied
included maternal psychopathology, continuing alcohol and drug use,
family structure, socioeconomic status, children's whole blood lead
level, and exposure to violence. Data were collected only from black
women as there was inadequate representation of other racial groups.
2 tests were used for
analyzing categorical data. Continuous data were analyzed using
t tests, analyses of variance (ANOVAs) with posthoc tests,
and regression analysis.
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- Pediatrics Online, 31 Aug 2001 [Full text]
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