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Cognitive Outcomes of Preschool Children With Prenatal Cocaine Exposure

Authors :
Robert Arendt
Meeyoung O. Min
H. Lester Kirchner
Nancy Klein
Sandra W. Russ
Elizabeth J. Short
Sonia Minnes
Lynn T. Singer
Kathleen J. Farkas
Barbara A. Lewis
Source :
JAMA
Publication Year :
2005
Publisher :
Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health), 2005.

Abstract

CONTEXT: Because of methodological limitations, the results of the few prospective studies assessing long-term cognitive effects of prenatal cocaine exposure are inconsistent. OBJECTIVE: To assess effects of prenatal cocaine exposure and quality of caregiving environment on 4-year cognitive outcomes. DESIGN: Longitudinal, prospective, masked comparison cohort study from birth (September 1994-June 1996) to 4 years. SETTING: Research laboratory of a US urban county teaching hospital. PARTICIPANTS: A total of 415 consecutively enrolled infants identified from a high-risk population screened for drug use through clinical interview, urine, and meconium screens. Ninety-three percent retention for surviving participants at 4 years of age resulted in 376 children (190 cocaine-exposed and 186 nonexposed). MAIN OUTCOME MEASURE: The Wechsler Preschool and Primary Scales of Intelligence-Revised. RESULTS: After control for covariates, prenatal cocaine exposure was not related to lower full-scale IQ (cocaine exposed [80.7] vs nonexposed [82.9]; P=.09) scores or summary verbal (cocaine exposed [79.9] vs nonexposed [81.9]; P=.11) or performance (cocaine exposed [85.5] vs nonexposed [87.5]; P=.18) IQ scores at age 4 years. However, prenatal cocaine exposure was related to small but significant deficits on several subscales (mean [SE]): visual-spatial skills (cocaine exposed [7.3 (0.22)] vs nonexposed [8.2 (0.22)]; P=.01), general knowledge (cocaine exposed [6.1 (0.18)] vs nonexposed [6.7 (0.17)]; P=.04), and arithmetic skills (cocaine exposed [6.2 (0.20)] vs nonexposed [6.8 (0.20)]; P=.05). Prenatal cocaine exposure was also associated with a lower likelihood of achievement of IQ above normative means (odds ratio, 0.26 [95% confidence interval, 0.10-0.65]; P=.004). The quality of the caregiving environment was the strongest independent predictor of outcomes. Cocaine-exposed children placed in nonrelative foster or adoptive care lived in homes with more stimulating environments and had caregivers with better vocabulary scores, and they attained full-scale and performance IQ scores (83 and 87, respectively) similar to nonexposed children in biological maternal or relative care (full-scale IQ, 82; performance IQ, 88) and higher than cocaine-exposed children in biological maternal or relative care (full-scale IQ, 79; performance IQ, 84). CONCLUSIONS: Prenatal cocaine exposure was not associated with lower full-scale, verbal, or performance IQ scores but was associated with an increased risk for specific cognitive impairments and lower likelihood of IQ above the normative mean at 4 years. A better home environment was associated with IQ scores for cocaine-exposed children that are similar to scores in nonexposed children.

Details

ISSN :
00297828
Volume :
60
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Obstetrical & Gynecological Survey
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....1a758bd3157473925dbc31f128069b56
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1097/01.ogx.0000143512.57021.70