4.7 Article

Maternal health around pregnancy and autism risk: a diagnosis-wide, population-based study

Journal

PSYCHOLOGICAL MEDICINE
Volume 52, Issue 16, Pages 4076-4084

Publisher

CAMBRIDGE UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1017/S0033291721001021

Keywords

Autism; diagnosis-wide; maternal health; prenatal effects

Funding

  1. Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development
  2. National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences
  3. National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke [HD 073978]
  4. Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development [HD098883]
  5. National Institute of Mental Health [MH124817]
  6. National Institute of Mental Health to Dr Khachadourian [MH122394]

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The study found 16 maternal diagnoses associated with ASD in offspring, including metabolic, genitourinary, and psychiatric disorders. Mothers of children with ASD were also less likely to attend prenatal care appointments.
Background Many studies have reported an increased risk of autism spectrum disorder (ASD) associated with some maternal diagnoses in pregnancy. However, such associations have not been studied systematically, accounting for comorbidity between maternal disorders. Therefore our aim was to comprehensively test the associations between maternal diagnoses around pregnancy and ASD risk in offspring. Methods This exploratory case-cohort study included children born in Israel from 1997 to 2008, and followed up until 2015. We used information on all ICD-9 codes received by their mothers during pregnancy and the preceding year. ASD risk associated with each of those conditions was calculated using Cox proportional hazards regression, adjusted for the confounders (birth year, maternal age, socioeconomic status and number of ICD-9 diagnoses during the exposure period). Results The analytic sample consisted of 80 187 individuals (1132 cases, 79 055 controls), with 822 unique ICD-9 codes recorded in their mothers. After extensive quality control, 22 maternal diagnoses were nominally significantly associated with offspring ASD, with 16 of those surviving subsequent filtering steps (permutation testing, multiple testing correction, multiple regression). Among those, we recorded an increased risk of ASD associated with metabolic [e.g. hypertension; HR = 2.74 (1.92-3.90), p = 2.43 x 10(-8)], genitourinary [e.g. non-inflammatory disorders of cervix; HR = 1.88 (1.38-2.57), p = 7.06 x 10(-5)] and psychiatric [depressive disorder; HR = 2.11 (1.32-3.35), p = 1.70 x 10(-3)] diagnoses. Meanwhile, mothers of children with ASD were less likely to attend prenatal care appointment [HR = 0.62 (0.54-0.71), p = 1.80 x 10(-11)]. Conclusions Sixteen maternal diagnoses were associated with ASD in the offspring, after rigorous filtering of potential false-positive associations. Replication in other cohorts and further research to understand the mechanisms underlying the observed associations with ASD are warranted.

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