School performance in Danish children exposed to maternal type 1 diabetes in utero: A nationwide retrospective cohort study

Spangmose, Anne Lærke and Skipper, Niels and Knorr, Sine and Wullum Gundersen, Tina and Beck Jensen, Rikke and Damm, Peter and Lykke Mortensen, Erik and Pinborg, Anja and Svensson, Jannet and Clausen, Tine and Persson, Lars Åke (2022) School performance in Danish children exposed to maternal type 1 diabetes in utero: A nationwide retrospective cohort study. PLOS Medicine, 19 (4). e1003977. ISSN 1549-1676

[thumbnail of journal.pmed.1003977.pdf] Text
journal.pmed.1003977.pdf - Published Version

Download (847kB)

Abstract

Background
Conflicting results have been reported concerning possible adverse effects on the cognitive function of offspring of mothers with type 1 diabetes (O-mT1D). Previous studies have included offspring of parents from the background population (O-BP), but not offspring of fathers with type 1 diabetes (O-fT1D) as the unexposed reference group.

Methods and findings
This is a population-based retrospective cohort study from 2010 to 2016. Nationally standardized school test scores (range, 1 to 100) were obtained for public school grades 2, 3, 4, 6, and 8 in O-mT1D and compared with those in O-fT1D and O-BP. Of the 622,073 included children, 2,144 were O-mT1D, and 3,474 were O-fT1D. Multiple linear regression models were used to compare outcomes, including the covariates offspring with type 1 diabetes, parity, number of siblings, offspring sex, smoking during pregnancy, parental age, and socioeconomic factors. Mean test scores were 54.2 (standard deviation, SD 24.8) in O-mT1D, 54.4 (SD 24.8) in O-fT1D, and 56.4 (SD 24.7) in O-BP. In adjusted analyses, the mean differences in test scores were −1.59 (95% CI −2.48 to −0.71, p < 0.001) between O-mT1D and O-BP and −0.78 (95% CI −1.48 to −0.08, p = 0.03) between O-fT1D and O-BP. No significant difference in the adjusted mean test scores was found between O-mT1D and O-fT1D (p = 0.16). The study’s limitation was no access to measures of glycemic control during pregnancy.

Conclusions
O-mT1D achieved lower test scores than O-BP but similar test scores compared with O-fT1D. Glycemic control during pregnancy is essential to prevent various adverse pregnancy outcomes in women with type 1 diabetes. However, the present study reduces previous concerns regarding adverse effects of in utero hyperglycemia on offspring cognitive function.

Item Type: Article
Subjects: Impact Archive > Medical Science
Depositing User: Managing Editor
Date Deposited: 25 Mar 2023 12:31
Last Modified: 01 Mar 2024 03:53
URI: http://research.sdpublishers.net/id/eprint/547

Actions (login required)

View Item
View Item