Forskningsradar
← Hälsa & medicin
Hälsa & medicin 3.7

Heavy Smoking During Pregnancy Linked to 60% Higher IBD Risk in Children

A major Scandinavian study of 115,000 children found that mothers who smoked six or more cigarettes daily during pregnancy increased their offspring's inflammatory bowel disease risk by 60%. The findings add to mounting evidence that prenatal tobacco exposure carries lasting health consequences, with implications for maternal health messaging and healthcare policy.

Originaltitel: Tobacco Smoke Exposure in Early Childhood and Later Risk of Inflammatory Bowel Disease: A Scandinavian Birth Cohort Study

Abstrakt

<p>Objectives To examine the association between early-life smoking exposure and later risk of inflammatory bowel disease [IBD].Methods We followed 115663 participants from the Norwegian Mother, Father and Child [MoBa] and All Babies in Southeast Sweden [ABIS] cohorts from birth [1997-2009] through 2021. IBD was identified through national patient registers. Validated questionnaire data defined maternal smoking during pregnancy, maternal environmental tobacco smoke [ETS] exposure during pregnancy, and child ETS exposure by ages 12 and 36 months. Cox regression was used to estimate adjusted hazard ratios [aHRs] for sex, maternal age, education level, parental IBD, and origin. Cohort-specific estimates were pooled using a random-effects model.Results During 1 987 430 person-years of follow-up, 444 participants developed IBD [ABIS, 112; MoBa, 332]. Any vs no maternal smoking during pregnancy yielded a pooled aHR of 1.30 [95% CI = 0.97-1.74] for offspring IBD. Higher level of maternal smoking during pregnancy (compared with no smoking, average &amp;gt;= 6 cigarettes/day: pooled aHR = 1.60 [95% CI = 1.08-2.38]) was associated with offspring IBD, whereas a lower smoking level was not (average 1-5 cigarettes/day: pooled aHR = 1.09 [95% CI = 0.73-1.64]). Child ETS exposure in the first year of life was associated with later IBD (any vs no ETS, pooled aHR = 1.32 [95% CI = 1.03-1.69]). Estimates observed for child ETS exposure by 36 months were similar but not statistically significant.Conclusions In this prospective Scandinavian cohort study, children exposed to higher levels of maternal smoking during pregnancy or ETS during the first year of life were at increased risk of later IBD.</p>

Generera ett redaktionellt utkast på svenska