1 / 21

Is Prenatal Caffeine Exposure Related to Neurodevelopment?

Is Prenatal Caffeine Exposure Related to Neurodevelopment?. Author 1 Author 2 PH251A: Practicum in Epidemiologic Methods 12/5/2007. Description of Question. Does prenatal coffee exposure increase the risk of poor neurodevelopment at ages 9 to 11?.

howie
Download Presentation

Is Prenatal Caffeine Exposure Related to Neurodevelopment?

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Is Prenatal Caffeine Exposure Related to Neurodevelopment? Author 1 Author 2 PH251A: Practicum in Epidemiologic Methods 12/5/2007

  2. Description of Question • Does prenatal coffee exposure increase the risk of poor neurodevelopment at ages 9 to 11?

  3. Reasons to Study Caffeine and Neurodevelopment • 71% of the caffeine in the US is consumed in the form of coffee (Faray, 2005) • Average American consumes 1.2 cups of coffee per day (FAS/USDA, 2002) • Widely ingested by pregnant women (Sobotka, 1989) • Can cross the placenta and reach the fetus; is metabolized more slowly during pregnancy • Associated with spontaneous abortion and low-birth weight in humans • Little information is available on the long-term effects of prenatal coffee exposure

  4. Summary of Background Literature Two studies directly address this question: • Jacobson et al (1984): Caffeine exposure predicted negative behavioral effects (p<0.05) • Barr et al (1989): Long term effects of caffeine on IQ at 4 and 7 years are null -- but they should conclude that they fail to find an effect

  5. Public Health Significance • Long-term effect or prenatal coffee exposure is still unknown • Because of the popularity of coffee, negative long-term effects would mandate wide-scale interventions to decrease prenatal consumption

  6. Primary Variables • Exposure Variable: Number of cups of prenatal coffee per day: • None or <1 a week • 1 to 2 cups/ day • 3 to 4 cups/ day • >4 cups/ day • Outcome Variable: • Peabody Picture Vocabulary Test: - Test for Verbal Intelligence - Scores range from 27 to 147 • Raven Colored Progressive Matrices - Test for perceptual reasoning - Scores range from 0 to 77

  7. Maternal Characteristics: - Age - BMI - Prenatal Smoking - Prenatal Alcohol - Prenatal Work - Marital Status - Peabody Score Paternal Age Total Family Income Child Characteristics - Age - Sex - Race - Birth weight - Gestational Length - Glasses Use Key Covariates

  8. Methods • Univariate and multivariate analyses were conducted to address the relationship between prenatal coffee exposure and Peabody and Raven Scores at ages 9 – 11. • Adjusted for confounders in the analyses. • Used restricted vs. full F-tests to help with model selection. • Looked at statistically significant interactions in the final model.

  9. Figure 1 (Subject Exclusion Flow Chart) Prospective Study Group – Total Number of Pregnancies N= 20,754 -4,826 Interview Before Delivery N= 15,928 -1,330 Live Births N= 14,899 - 301 Singleton Births N= 14,598 -451 No Severe Birth Anomalies N=14,147 -10,410 At Nine to Eleven Year Old Exam Total Children Examined N=3,737

  10. Results- Outline • Summary Statistics • Univariate Analysis • Crude RR • Multivariate Analysis • Included statistically significant (found in univariate analysis)and biologically relevant covariates. • Model selection: Checked different models, compared them using F-tests • Checked for normality assumptions • Checked for the effect of outliers in the final model

  11. Select Variables -Univariate Analysis

  12. Outcome by Exposure – Crude RRs

  13. Final Model – Key Results • Effect of prenatal coffee intake on child’s Peabody scores: statistically significant negative effect after controlling for the effect of other relevant covariates • Intake of 3-4 cups of coffee compared to no coffee is associated with 1.57 point reduction in Peabody scores: Effect is small but highly statistically significant.

  14. Final Model – Key Results • Similar Results if Raven Scores are used as an independent variable: Provide more confidence about the overall finding

  15. Final Model

  16. Comparison with previous studies • Barr et al (1991) fail to find an effect of prenatal caffeine exposure on child’s IQ at ages 4 and 7 -- However, this study does not control for the effect of mother’s IQ or its equivalent • In our analysis we find that mother’s IQ (measured as mother’s Peabody score) is a confounder. Mother’s Peabody score is positively correlated with both Child’s Peabody score and prenatal coffee intake. • If we do not control for this confounder, we fail to see an effect of prenatal coffee on child’s Peabody and Raven Scores.

  17. Other Findings • We explored the possibilities of interactions (effect modifications) of different independent variables such as: alcohol intake and coffee intake, alcohol intake and smoking, smoking and alcohol intake, race and coffee intake, mother’s Peabody scores and coffee intake, SES and coffee intake • We do not find statistically significant effect of interactions

  18. Other Findings • Other variables that were significant and that were positively associated with child’s peabody scores: • mother’s age, father’s occupation, mother’s peabody scores, high prenatal alcohol intake, child did not wear glasses, mother’s occupation, mother’s education, Child’s race (other), age of child at exam • Other studies that use the CHDS dataset do not use alcohol variable as covariate?? • Excluding alcohol variable do not affect the result of caffeine intake • Other variables that were significant and that were negatively associated with child’s peabody scores: • Female child, black race, 2-4 cups of coffee per day

  19. Conclusions • Prenatal coffee intake has a small negative effect on child’s neurodevelopment as assessed by Peabody (2% reduction) and Raven scores (4.3% reduction) • Effects precisely estimated • Caution in drinking 3-4 cups of coffee/ day during pregnancy is warranted

  20. Limitations and Future Research • Coffee is the only source of caffeine included • Milligrams of caffeine in each cup of coffee was unspecified in the CHDS dataset • No possible explanation for the counterintuitive effect of alcohol on child’s Peabody and Raven scores

  21. Bibliography • Barr HM and Streissguth AP. Caffeine Use During Pregnancy and Child Outcome: A 7-Year Prospective Study. Neurotoxicology and Teratology. 13:441-448; 1989. • FAS/USDA, Horticulture and Tropical Products Division. US Coffee Consumption. 2002. Accessed on 9/17/07. Available at: http://www.fas.usda.gov/htp/tropical/2002/06-02/coffusco.pdf. • Jacobson SW, Fein GG, Jacobson JL, Schwartz PM, Dowler JK. Neonatal Correlates of Prenatal Exposure to Smoking, Caffeine, and Alcohol. Infant Behavior and Development. 7:253-265; 1984. • Streissguth AP, Barr HM, Martin DC. Maternal Alcohol Use and Neonatal Habituation Assessed with the Brazelton Scale. Child Development. 54(5): 1109-1118; 1983. • Streissguth AP, Barr HM, Sampson PD. Moderate Prenatal Alcohol Exposure: Effects on Child IQ and Learning Problems and Age 7.5 Years. Alcoholism: Clinical and Experimental Research. 14(5): 662-669; 1990.

More Related