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Size at birth and cognitive ability in late life: A systematic review

Size at birth and cognitive ability in late life: A systematic review
Size at birth and cognitive ability in late life: A systematic review

Introduction: Recent evidence suggests that growth restriction in utero may lead to neurocognitive disorders in late life, either through impaired brain development or adverse metabolic programming. Methods: Systematic review of literature investigating the relationship between size at birth and cognitive abilities in late life. The search, data extraction, and rating for the quality of reporting were conducted independently by two researchers. Results: Of 533 selected studies, 11 were included in this systematic review and 10 of these were from high-income setting. Of these 11 studies, eight indicated that lower birth weight is a risk factor for lower cognitive function in late life, at least in high-income countries. The reported effect sizes were small and it was not possible to conduct meta-analyses because of clinical heterogeneity. Discussion: A modest association of lower birth weight with lower cognitive abilities in late life is consistent with persisting effects of the prenatal environment on brain function. As with all observational studies, confounding is an alternative explanation. Further studies are required to elucidate the mechanisms.

birth weight, cognition, DOHaD, systematic review
0885-6230
Krishna, Murali
323774b9-e195-4608-8aa2-adb3d16f4637
Jones, Steven
c903deb2-5c0f-4438-b9df-8da15ebe3c6b
Maden, Michelle
79b27648-857a-41c4-afc6-5bb9ce001f15
Bharath, D. U.
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Ramya, M. C.
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Kumaran, Kalyanaraman
de6f872c-7339-4a52-be84-e3bbae707744
Karat, Samuel Christraprasad
f06768bc-b583-4152-9336-8644197ea606
Fall, Caroline H.D.
7171a105-34f5-4131-89d7-1aa639893b18
Krishna, Murali
323774b9-e195-4608-8aa2-adb3d16f4637
Jones, Steven
c903deb2-5c0f-4438-b9df-8da15ebe3c6b
Maden, Michelle
79b27648-857a-41c4-afc6-5bb9ce001f15
Bharath, D. U.
19d3f67c-5983-4010-8118-c392dcb9655c
Ramya, M. C.
eeafee89-5e36-4cb4-bda4-9c14f54c4c10
Kumaran, Kalyanaraman
de6f872c-7339-4a52-be84-e3bbae707744
Karat, Samuel Christraprasad
f06768bc-b583-4152-9336-8644197ea606
Fall, Caroline H.D.
7171a105-34f5-4131-89d7-1aa639893b18

Krishna, Murali, Jones, Steven, Maden, Michelle, Bharath, D. U., Ramya, M. C., Kumaran, Kalyanaraman, Karat, Samuel Christraprasad and Fall, Caroline H.D. (2019) Size at birth and cognitive ability in late life: A systematic review. International Journal of Geriatric Psychiatry. (doi:10.1002/gps.5138).

Record type: Review

Abstract

Introduction: Recent evidence suggests that growth restriction in utero may lead to neurocognitive disorders in late life, either through impaired brain development or adverse metabolic programming. Methods: Systematic review of literature investigating the relationship between size at birth and cognitive abilities in late life. The search, data extraction, and rating for the quality of reporting were conducted independently by two researchers. Results: Of 533 selected studies, 11 were included in this systematic review and 10 of these were from high-income setting. Of these 11 studies, eight indicated that lower birth weight is a risk factor for lower cognitive function in late life, at least in high-income countries. The reported effect sizes were small and it was not possible to conduct meta-analyses because of clinical heterogeneity. Discussion: A modest association of lower birth weight with lower cognitive abilities in late life is consistent with persisting effects of the prenatal environment on brain function. As with all observational studies, confounding is an alternative explanation. Further studies are required to elucidate the mechanisms.

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Krishna_et_al-2019-International_Journal_of_Geriatric_Psychiatry - Version of Record
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Accepted/In Press date: 19 April 2019
e-pub ahead of print date: 6 May 2019
Keywords: birth weight, cognition, DOHaD, systematic review

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 432074
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/432074
ISSN: 0885-6230
PURE UUID: 33ddb4d4-28c0-4db6-a90f-873493b1fd65
ORCID for Caroline H.D. Fall: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-4402-5552

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Date deposited: 01 Jul 2019 16:30
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 02:38

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Contributors

Author: Murali Krishna
Author: Steven Jones
Author: Michelle Maden
Author: D. U. Bharath
Author: M. C. Ramya
Author: Samuel Christraprasad Karat

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