Obesity during pregnancy doubles autism risk and increases ADHD risk by up to 57% (Sep 2024, n=3.6m mother-child pairs) Associations between maternal preconception and pregnancy adiposity and neuropsychiatric and behavioral outcomes in the offspring: A systematic review and meta-analysis Study 

Michael Harrop

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Relevant due to the recent RFK/Trump announcement blaming Tylenol. Rhonda Patrick alerted me to this.

Highlights​

  • Maternal preconception adiposity was linked with increased risks of offspring ADHD, ASD, conduct disorder, externalizing behaviours, and peer relationship problems.
  • Maternal pregnancy adiposity was linked with increased risk of offspring ADHD, ASD, and peer relationship problems.
  • Maternal adiposity was not linked with offspring mood, anxiety, personality, eating, sleep disorders, or prosocial problems.
  • Preconception weight management may mitigate such adverse effects in the offspring.

Abstract​

Maternal adiposity (overweight or obesity) has been associated with adverse perinatal outcomes, although the potential risks of long-term neuropsychiatric and behavioral outcomes in the offspring remain unclear.

Using the PRISMA guidelines, we searched PubMed, EMBASE, Scopus, and Web of Science to identify studies on maternal adiposity and offspring neuropsychiatric outcomes. Inverse variance-weighted random-effects meta-analyses were used to pool effect estimates with 95 % confidence intervals (95 % CIs) from adjusted odds ratios (OR) and hazard ratios (HR). Estimates were computed separately for preconception and pregnancy maternal overweight and obesity, with outcomes stratified by the type of neuropsychiatric outcome.

In our meta-analyses of 42 epidemiological studies involving 3,680,937 mother-offspring pairs, we found increased risks of ADHD [OR=1.57, 95 % CI: 1.42-1.74], autism spectrum disorder [OR=1.42, 95 % CI: 1.22-1.65], conduct disorder [OR=1.16, 95 % CI: 1.00-1.35], Psychotic disorder [HR=1.61, 95 % CI: 1.41-1.83], externalizing behaviors [OR=1.30, 95 % CI: 1.07-1.56] and peer relationship problems [OR=1.25, 95 % CI: 1.04-1.27] in the offspring of preconception obese mothers.

Similar increased risks were found in the offspring of preconception overweight mothers and those exposed to maternal adiposity during pregnancy. However, no association was found with offspring mood, anxiety, personality, eating, sleep disorders or prosocial problems. Preconception weight management may mitigate such adverse effects in the offspring.
 
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