Pregnant mums who smoke during pregnancy
are much more likely to have children who go on to smoke cannabis, new
research has revealed. The research from the University of Bristol found
that smoking during pregnancy can help to set patterns of behaviour in
later years.
It
is already widely accepted that smoking just one cigarette a day can
harm the health of unborn children. It can lead to birth defects,
premature delivery and increase the chances of miscarriage.
But
now new research has found smoking makes it more likely for infants to
go on to smoke cannabis as teenagers. The 40-year longitudinal study
provides the first evidence that prenatal exposure to the class of
stress hormones known as glucocorticoids predicts nicotine dependence
later in life – but only for daughters. It also confirms previous
research that babies born to moms who smoked when pregnant have an
increased risk of nicotine addiction in adulthood. The study found that
effects of maternal stress hormones and maternal smoking in pregnancy
were additive in predicting nicotine addiction in adult daughters.
The
findings, published online by the journal Biological Psychiatry, point
to the enduring influence of the prenatal environment and the importance
of maternal health and wellbeing during pregnancy. Lead author Laura
Stroud, Ph.D., from the Centers for Behavioral and Preventive Medicine
at The Miriam Hospital, says the study supports the critical role of the
prenatal environment when it comes to risk factors for adult disease,
meaning some people may be predisposed to, or ‘programmed’ for, certain
conditions later in life because of exposures during pregnancy, such as
stress and maternal smoking.
“While maternal smoking during
pregnancy has been shown to be an independent risk factor for nicotine
dependence, we didn’t really know – until now – which pathways or
mechanisms were responsible. Most prior research involving biological
mechanisms had been conducted in animals not humans,” she said. “Our
study suggests that maternal smoking and high stress hormones-often
linked to high stress and adverse social conditionsrepresent a
‘double-hit’ in terms of increasing an offspring’s risk for nicotine
addiction as an adult.”
Because mothers who smoke are often more
stressed and living in adverse conditions- these findings represent a
public health concern and highlight the need to help smoking moms quit
and reduce stress levels and improve social conditions for poor pregnant
mothers,” Stroud added.
Associations between prenatal exposure
to both glucocorticoids – particularly cortisol – and tobacco smoke
emerged only for daughters, which Stroud says it consistent with some
recent research findings.
“Our findings highlight the particular
vulnerability of daughters to long-term adverse outcomes following
maternal stress and smoking during pregnancy,” she said. “We don’t yet
know why this is, but possible mechanisms include sex differences in
stress hormone regulation in the placenta and adaptation to prenatal
environmental exposures. Also, cortisol and nicotine may affect
developing male and female brains differently.”
“Furthermore, if
daughters of smoking mothers are more likely to grow up nicotine
dependent, the result is dangerous cycle of intergenerational
transmission of nicotine addiction,” she added. Despite the warnings and
known health risks, approximately one in five expectant moms in the
United States continue to smoke during pregnancy. Studies have
consistently found that prenatal cigarette smoke exposure is associated
with increased rates of behavior problems, irritability,
attention-deficit and hyperactivity disorder, the risk of violent
offenses, conduct disorder, adolescent onset of drug dependence and the
risk for criminal arrest in offspring.
This study adds another
potential negative outcome – nicotine dependence – to the list of
reasons for mothers to stop smoking while pregnant. Stroud and
colleagues studied 1,086 pairs of mothers and their adult children (59
percent female) from the New England Family Study, a 40-year
longitudinal follow-up of the Collaborative Perinatal Project based at
Brown University. Maternal smoking during pregnancy was assessed
prospectively at each prenatal visit, and the mother’s cortisol,
testosterone and cotinine (a nicotine metabolite passed from mother to
infant) levels were measured during the third trimester.
The
adult children’s lifetime nicotine dependence was assessed during a
structured interview; the average age at this followup was 39. By
studying both maternal smoking and cortisol levels as independent
factors, researchers were able to observe whether these two pathways
contributed to nicotine dependence in the adult children. They found
increased exposure to prenatal glucocorticoids was associated with a 13
percent increased risk of nictotine dependence in daughters only over
the 40-year follow-up. Mothers who smoked 15 cigarettes a day or more
during pregnancy were 52 percent more likely to have a daughter addicted
to nicotine.
“Cigarette smoking is the number one cause of
preventable disease, illness and premature death worldwide,” said
Stroud. “Eliminating smoking during pregnancy and improving the
environmental conditions of poor pregnant mothers continues to be a
vital challenge for both clinicians and the public health community.”
She
adds that the findings highlight both the need for enhanced strategies
for smoking cessation during pregnancy along with the possibility of
targeted smoking cessation efforts later in life, where more intense
efforts may be warranted for those with a history of family smoking
including prenatal exposure.
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