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Poverty from fetal life onward and child brain morphology

Poverty is a risk factor for impaired child development, an association possibly mediated by brain morphology. Previous studies lacked prospective poverty assessments during pregnancy and did not stratify by majority/minority status. We investigated the association of household poverty from fetal li...

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Published in:Scientific reports 2023-01, Vol.13 (1), p.1295-1295, Article 1295
Main Authors: Koyama, Yuna, Hidalgo, Andrea P. Cortes, Lacey, Rebecca E., White, Tonya, Jansen, Pauline W., Fujiwara, Takeo, Tiemeier, Henning
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description Poverty is a risk factor for impaired child development, an association possibly mediated by brain morphology. Previous studies lacked prospective poverty assessments during pregnancy and did not stratify by majority/minority status. We investigated the association of household poverty from fetal life forward with brain morphological differences at age 10 years, in 2166 mother–child dyads. Overall, the results showed no associations between any poverty exposure early in life and brain volumes. However, there was the evidence of timing effects: children exposed to poverty in utero had smaller amygdala volumes (B =  − 0.18, 95%CI − 0.30; − 0.07, p FDR-adjusted  = 0.009). There were also differences in associations by majority/minority status (cerebral white matter: p for interaction = 0.04). Dutch children exposed to childhood poverty showed smaller cerebral white matter volumes than their control (B =  − 0.26, 95%CI − 0.45; − 0.06, p FDR-adjusted  = 0.035). This association was not observed in the minority population (B =  − 0.05, 95%CI − 0.23; 0.12, p FDR-adjusted  = 0.542). The smaller cerebral white matter volume mediated the association between childhood poverty and poorer school performance in Dutch children. Our findings point to the importance of poverty exposure in the fetal period and suggest different mechanisms and vulnerabilities across majority/minority groups.
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subjects 631/378
692/308
692/308/174
692/308/3187
692/499
704/844/2787
Amygdala
Brain
Child
Child poverty
Children
Children & youth
Female
Fetuses
Humanities and Social Sciences
Humans
Magnetic Resonance Imaging
Minority & ethnic groups
Morphology
multidisciplinary
Poverty
Pregnancy
Prenatal Care
Prospective Studies
Risk factors
Science
Science (multidisciplinary)
Substantia alba
White Matter
title Poverty from fetal life onward and child brain morphology
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