Is association of preterm birth with cognitive-neurophysiological impairments and ADHD symptoms consistent with a causal inference or due to familial confounds?
Sarah-Naomi JamesAnna-Sophie RommelFruhling RijsdijkGiorgia MicheliniGráinne McLoughlinDaniel BrandeisTobias BanaschewskiPhilip AshersonJonna KuntsiPublished in: Psychological medicine (2019)
Our results suggest that the relationship between preterm birth with ADHD symptoms and specific cognitive-neurophysiological impairments (IQ, preparation-vigilance and error processing) is independent of family-level risk and consistent with a causal inference. In contrast, our results suggest that previously observed associations between preterm birth with executive control processes of inhibition and working memory are instead linked to background characteristics of families with a preterm-born child rather than preterm birth insult per se. These findings suggest that interventions need to target both preterm-birth specific and family-level risk factors.