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The persistent effects of foetal growth on child and adolescent mental health: longitudinal evidence from a large population-based cohort

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posted on 2024-10-01, 11:21 authored by Niamh DooleyNiamh Dooley, Colm Healy, David CotterDavid Cotter, Mary ClarkeMary Clarke, Mary CannonMary Cannon

Low birth weight for one's gestational age is associated with higher rates of child psychopathology, however, most studies assess psychopathology cross-sectionally. The effect of such foetal growth restriction appears to be strongest for attention problems in childhood, although adult studies have found associations with a range of outcomes, from depression to psychosis. We explore how associations between foetal growth and psychopathology change across age, and whether they vary by sex. We used a large nationally representative cohort of children from Ireland (N ~ 8000). Parents completed the Strengths and Difficulties Questionnaire (SDQ) at 3 time points (age 9, 13 and 17). Outcomes included a total problems scale and subscales measuring attention/hyperactivity, peer, conduct and emotional problems. Foetal growth had significant associations with all problem scales, even after controlling for sex, socioeconomic factors and parental mental health. The magnitude of these effects was small but relatively stable across ages 9-17. In males, foetal growth had the strongest associations with attention/hyperactivity and peer problems, whereas females showed more widespread associations with all four subscales. There was a trend for the association between foetal growth and emotional problems to increase with advancing age, approaching the borderline-abnormal threshold by age 17. Reduced foetal growth predicted persistently higher scores on all measured aspects of child and adolescent psychopathology. Associations with child attention/hyperactivity may generalize to a wider array of adult psychopathologies via adolescent-onset emotional problems. Future studies should explore potential age-dependent effects of foetal growth into the early 20s. 

Funding

Open Access funding provided by the IReL Consortium

StAR International PhD Scholarship awarded by the Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland

Health Research Board of 2075European Child & Adolescent Psychiatry (2023) 32:2067–2076 1 3Ireland (HRB ILP POR 2019-005, ILP-PHR-2019-009, HRA-PHR-2015-1130)

Irish Research Council award (COALESCE/2019/61)

Consolidator Award from the European Research Council (iHEAR 724809)

History

Data Availability Statement

The Growing Up in Ireland data is available via application to either the Irish Social Sciences Data Archive or the Central Statistics Office of Ireland depending on the level of detail required. Files containing additional detail and sensitive data (used in this study) are only available via the latter and under strict conditions of confidentiality and data protection.

Comments

The original article is available at https://link.springer.com/

Published Citation

Dooley N, Healy C, Cotter D, Clarke M, Cannon M. The persistent effects of foetal growth on child and adolescent mental health: longitudinal evidence from a large population-based cohort. Eur Child Adolesc Psychiatry. 2023;32(10):2067-2076

Publication Date

21 July 2022

PubMed ID

35861893

Department/Unit

  • Psychiatry
  • Beaumont Hospital

Publisher

Springer Nature

Version

  • Published Version (Version of Record)