A scoping review of multigenerational impacts of grandparental exposures on mental health in grandchildren.
Jingyuan XiaoAnushka JainGiselle BelliaKate NyhanZeyan LiewPublished in: Current environmental health reports (2023)
We performed a literature search using PubMed and Embase and included 18 articles for this review. The most investigated grandparental pregnancy-related factors were the grandparental age of pregnancy (N = 6), smoking during pregnancy (N = 4), and medication intake (N = 3). The most frequently examined grandchild outcomes were autism spectrum disorder (N = 6) and attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (N = 4). Among these studies, grandparental smoking and the use of diethylstilbestrol were more consistently reported to be associated with neurodevelopmental disorders, while the findings for grandparental age vary across the maternal or paternal line. Grandmaternal weight, adverse delivery outcomes, and other spatial-temporal markers of physical and social environmental stressors require further scrutiny. The current body of literature has suggested that mental and neurodevelopmental disorders may be outcomes of unfavorable exposures originating from the grandparental generation during their pregnancies. To advance the field, we recommend research efforts into setting up multigenerational studies with prospectively collected data that span through at least three generations, incorporating spatial, environmental, and biological markers for exposure assessment, expanding the outcome phenotypes evaluated, and developing a causal analytical framework including mediation analyses specific for multigenerational research.
Keyphrases
- mental health
- attention deficit hyperactivity disorder
- autism spectrum disorder
- pregnancy outcomes
- preterm birth
- systematic review
- physical activity
- air pollution
- smoking cessation
- case control
- intellectual disability
- weight gain
- birth weight
- weight loss
- human health
- adipose tissue
- skeletal muscle
- machine learning
- big data
- gestational age
- climate change
- adverse drug
- life cycle
- congenital heart disease
- liquid chromatography
- single molecule
- artificial intelligence