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Wiley Open Access, JCPP Advances, 2(1), 2021

DOI: 10.1002/jcv2.12020

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Acetaminophen use during pregnancy and offspring attention deficit hyperactivity disorder – a longitudinal sibling control study

This paper is made freely available by the publisher.
This paper is made freely available by the publisher.

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Data provided by SHERPA/RoMEO

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundMaternal acetaminophen use during pregnancy is associated with increased risk of ADHD in the child. This could reflect causal influence of acetaminophen on fetal neurodevelopment or could be due to confounding factors. The aim of the current study was to examine unmeasured familial confounding factors of this association.MethodsWe used data from 26,613 children from 12,902 families participating in the prospective Norwegian Mother, Father, and Child Cohort Study (MoBa). The MoBa was linked to the Norwegian Medical Birth Register and the Norwegian Patient Registry. Siblings discordant for prenatal acetaminophen exposure were compared regarding risk of having an ADHD diagnosis.ResultsChildren exposed to acetaminophen up to 28 days during pregnancy did not have increased risk of receiving an ADHD diagnosis compared to unexposed children. The adjusted Hazard ratio (aHR) was 0.87 (95% C.I. = 0.70‐1.08) for exposure 1 to 7 days, and 1.13 (95% C.I. = 0.82–1.49) for 8–28 days. Long‐term exposure (29 days or more) was associated with a two‐fold increase in risk of ADHD diagnosis (aHR = 2.02, 95% C.I = 1.17–3.25). In the sibling control model, the association between long‐term acetaminophen use and ADHD in the child was aHR = 2.77 (95% C.I. = 1.48–5.05) at the between‐family level, and aHR = 1.06 (95% C.I. = 0.51–2.05) at the within‐family level.ConclusionsBoth the exposed and the unexposed children of mothers with long‐term use of acetaminophen in one of the pregnancies had increased risk of receiving an ADHD diagnosis. This indicates that the observed association between long‐term acetaminophen use during pregnancy and ADHD in the child may at least partly be confounded by unobserved family factors.