4.4 Article

Early life environmental factors associated with autism spectrum disorder symptoms in children at age 2 years: A birth cohort study

Journal

AUTISM
Volume 26, Issue 7, Pages 1864-1881

Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS LTD
DOI: 10.1177/13623613211068223

Keywords

autism spectrum disorder; autism spectrum disorder symptoms; cohort study; early life; environmental air pollutants; environmental factors; lifestyle; maternal health; socioeconomic status

Funding

  1. National Health and Medical Research Council (NHMRC) of Australia
  2. Jack Brockhoff Foundation
  3. Scobie Trust
  4. Shane O'Brien Memorial Asthma Foundation
  5. Our Women's Our Children's Fundraising Committee Barwon Health
  6. Shepherd Foundation
  7. Rotary Club of Geelong
  8. Ilhan Food Allergy Foundation
  9. GMHBA Limited
  10. Percy Baxter Charitable Trust
  11. Perpetual Trustees
  12. Victorian Government's Operational Infrastructure Support Program
  13. Melbourne Children's LifeCourse PhD Support Program scholarship
  14. Royal Children's Hospital Foundation grant [2018-984]
  15. NHMRC PhD scholarship
  16. NHMRC Senior Research Fellowships [APP1008396, APP1045161]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Mounting evidence suggests that early life environmental factors increase the likelihood of autism spectrum disorder. This study found that autism spectrum disorder symptoms at the age of 2 strongly predicted diagnosis by the age of 4. Factors such as lower household income, lone parental status, younger maternal age, maternal pre-pregnancy body mass index, higher gestational weight gain, prenatal maternal stress, prenatal alcohol, environmental air pollutant exposures, secondhand tobacco smoke exposure, dampness/mould, and home heating with oil, kerosene or diesel heaters were associated with autism spectrum disorder symptoms.
Mounting evidence finds that early life environmental factors increased the probability of autism spectrum disorder. We estimated prospective associations between early life environmental factors and autism spectrum disorder symptoms in children at the age of 2 years in a population-derived birth cohort, the Barwon Infant Study. Autism spectrum disorder symptoms at the age of 2 years strongly predicted autism spectrum disorder diagnosis by the age of 4 years (area under curve = 0.93; 95% CI (0.82, 1.00)). After adjusting for child's sex and age at the time of behavioural assessment, markers of socioeconomic disadvantage, such as lower household income and lone parental status; maternal health factors, including younger maternal age, maternal pre-pregnancy body mass index, higher gestational weight gain and prenatal maternal stress; prenatal alcohol; environmental air pollutant exposures, including particulate matter < 2.5 mu m at birth, child secondhand tobacco smoke exposure at 12 months, dampness/mould and home heating with oil, kerosene or diesel heaters at 2 years postnatal. Lower socioeconomic indexes for area, later birth order, higher maternal prenatal depression, and maternal smoking frequency had a dose-response relationship with autism spectrum disorder symptoms. Future studies on environmental factors and autism spectrum disorder should consider the reasons for the socioeconomic disparity and the combined impact of multiple environmental factors through common mechanistic pathways. Lay abstract Mounting evidence indicates the contribution of early life environmental factors in autism spectrum disorder. We aim to report the prospective associations between early life environmental factors and autism spectrum disorder symptoms in children at the age of 2 years in a population-derived birth cohort, the Barwon Infant Study. Autism spectrum disorder symptoms at the age of 2 years strongly predicted autism spectrum disorder diagnosis by the age of 4 years (area under curve = 0.93; 95% CI (0.82, 1.00)). After adjusting for child's sex and age at the time of behavioural assessment, markers of socioeconomic disadvantage, such as lower household income and lone parental status; maternal health factors, including younger maternal age, maternal pre-pregnancy body mass index, higher gestational weight gain and prenatal maternal stress; maternal lifestyle factors, such as prenatal alcohol and environmental air pollutant exposures, including particulate matter < 2.5 mu m at birth, child secondhand tobacco smoke at 12 months, dampness/mould and home heating with oil, kerosene or diesel heaters at 2 years postnatal. Lower socioeconomic indexes for area, later birth order, higher maternal prenatal depression and maternal smoking frequency had a dose-response relationship with autism spectrum disorder symptoms. Future studies on environmental factors and autism spectrum disorder should consider the reasons for the socioeconomic disparity and the combined impact of multiple environmental factors through common mechanistic pathways.

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