Exposure to prenatal infection and the development of internalizing and externalizing problems in children: a longitudinal population‐based study

Author:

Suleri Anna12,Rommel Anna‐Sophie3,Neumann Alexander12ORCID,Luo Mannan12,Hillegers Manon1,de Witte Lotje3,Bergink Veerle34,Cecil Charlotte A. M.156ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry/Psychology Erasmus MC University Medical Center Rotterdam The Netherlands

2. The Generation R Study Group Erasmus MC University Medical Center Rotterdam The Netherlands

3. Department of Psychiatry Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai New York NY USA

4. Department of Psychiatry Erasmus MC University Medical Center Rotterdam The Netherlands

5. Department of Epidemiology Erasmus MC University Medical Center Rotterdam The Netherlands

6. Department of Biomedical Data Sciences, Molecular Epidemiology Leiden University Medical Center Leiden The Netherlands

Abstract

BackgroundA large body of work has reported a link between prenatal exposure to infection and increased psychiatric risk in offspring. However, studies to date have focused primarily on exposure to severe prenatal infections and/or individual psychiatric diagnoses in clinical samples, typically measured at single time points, and without accounting for important genetic and environmental confounders. In this study, we investigated whether exposure to common infections during pregnancy is prospectively associated with repeatedly assessed child psychiatric symptoms in a large population‐based study.MethodsOur study was embedded in a prospective pregnancy cohort (Generation R; n = 3,598 mother–child dyads). We constructed a comprehensive prenatal infection score comprising common infections for each trimester of pregnancy. Child total, internalizing, and externalizing problems were assessed repeatedly using the parent‐rated Child Behavioral Checklist (average age: 1.5, 3, 6, 10, and 14 years). Linear mixed‐effects models were run adjusting for a range of confounders, including child polygenic scores for psychopathology, maternal chronic illness, birth complications, and infections during childhood. We also investigated trimester‐specific effects and child sex as a potential moderator.ResultsPrenatal exposure to infections was associated with higher child total, internalizing, and externalizing problems, showing temporally persistent effects, even after adjusting for important genetic and environmental confounders. We found no evidence that prenatal infections were associated with changes in child psychiatric symptoms over time. Moreover, in our trimester‐specific analysis, we did not find evidence of significant timing effects of prenatal infection on child psychiatric symptoms. No interactions with child sex were identified.ConclusionsOur research adds to evidence that common prenatal infections may be a risk factor for psychiatric symptoms in children. We also extend previous findings by showing that these associations are present early on, and that rather than changing over time, they persist into adolescence. However, unmeasured confounding may still explain in part these associations. In the future, employing more advanced causal inference designs will be crucial to establishing the degree to which these effects are causal.

Funder

European Research Council

HORIZON EUROPE European Innovation Council

NIH Clinical Center

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Psychiatry and Mental health,Developmental and Educational Psychology,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health

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