A1 Refereed original research article in a scientific journal
Maternal prenatal psychological distress associates with offspring early-life wheezing - FinnBrain Birth Cohort
Authors: Puosi Emma, Korhonen Laura S, Karlsson Linnea, Kataja Eeva-Leena, Lukkarinen Heikki, Karlsson Hasse, Lukkarinen Minna
Publisher: WILEY
Publication year: 2022
Journal: Pediatric Allergy and Immunology
Journal name in source: PEDIATRIC ALLERGY AND IMMUNOLOGY
Journal acronym: PEDIAT ALLERG IMM-UK
Volume: 33
Issue: 1
First page : 1
Last page: 12
Number of pages: 12
ISSN: 0905-6157
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1111/pai.13706
Self-archived copy’s web address: https://research.utu.fi/converis/portal/detail/Publication/68060407
Background: Exposure to prenatal maternal psychological distress may contribute to the development of childhood atopic disorders. Little is known about the importance of distress severity and its duration for the risk. Our aim was to investigate how chronic maternal depressive and anxiety symptoms across gestation influence the risk of wheezing and eczema at child age 24 months.
Methods: The study population was drawn from the FinnBrain Birth Cohort Study, including 1305 mother-infant dyads followed across gestation until the child age of 24 months when the outcomes were mother-reported wheezing ever and doctor-diagnosed eczema. To investigate the risk of wheezing phenotypes, wheezing with and without eczema was separated. Maternal distress was assessed with the Edinburgh Postnatal Depression Scale for depressive and the Symptom Checklist-90 for anxiety symptoms three times during pregnancy, and the chronicity was demonstrated using symptom trajectories composed by latent growth mixture modeling.
Results: Of the children, 219/1305 (17%) had wheezing ever and 285/1276 (22%) had eczema. Risk of wheezing ever was elevated with maternal consistently high depressive symptoms (adjusted odds ratio 2.74; 95% confidence interval 1.37-5.50) or moderate and increasing anxiety symptoms (1.94; 1.06-3.54, respectively). Similarly, wheezing without eczema was associated with consistently high depressive (3.60; 1.63-7.94, respectively) and moderate and increasing anxiety symptoms (2.43; 1.21-4.91, respectively).
Conclusions: Maternal chronic psychological distress across gestation was associated with toddler wheezing and especially wheezing without other atopic features (eczema). This finding supports the theory of intrauterine programming effect by maternal psychological distress on offspring immune system and respiratory morbidity.
Downloadable publication This is an electronic reprint of the original article. |