B3367 - Maternal nutritional status in pregnancy and offspring Autism Spectrum Disorder a social perspective - 21/09/2019
What a mother eats during pregnancy has previously been established to programme their infants health in later live, even tracking through to adulthood. However, despite compelling evidence to support foetal programming of physical health, neurodevelopment has remained understudied. Recently, autism has gained increased attention within this field of research. Although largely caused by genetic factors, it is now estimated that approximately 20% of the risk of developing autism relates to environmental factors, of which nutrition is a main focus. Preliminary evidence indicates that the risk of developing autism may be reduced through consumption of a nutritionally adequate diet or nutritional supplements. Furthermore, the presence of social patterning is unknown. Health inequities are observed in numerous health outcomes as low socioeconomic position groups experience more adversity including poorer diet quality. Thus, it is possible that, where an association existed between maternal diet and their childâs risk of autism, it may also be socially patterned.
Two datasets will be compared for this project, ALSPAC and a second dataset called the Norwegian Mother and Child Cohort Study. The data from each cohort will be analysed in the same way.
This project will apply statistical methods that estimate if there is an association between maternal nutritional intake during pregnancy and the childâs risk of developing autism. The project will apply âcausal methodsâ which are statistical methods which better estimate causal relationships from observation data when compared to conventional methods with measure âassociationâ. A key way in which this occurs is through adjusting for confounders which vary over time, such as early infant nutrition. Both pregnancy and early infant nutrition such as breastfeeding, complementary feeding and nutrition in the early years have been associated with neurodevelopment and so the effects measured in pregnancy may be further altered by nutrition consumed in childhood. Lastly, results will be stratified by socioeconomic position to more clearly assess the presence and the degree of social patterning in this relationship.