Biological Psychiatry
Volume 58, Issue 3 , Pages 211-217, 1 August 2005

Prenatal Anxiety Predicts Individual Differences in Cortisol in Pre-Adolescent Children

  • Thomas G. O’Connor

      Affiliations

    • Department of Psychiatry, University of Rochester Medical Center, Rochester, New York
    • Corresponding Author InformationAddress reprint requests to Thomas G. O’Connor, University of Rochester Medical Center, Department of Psychiatry, 300 Crittenden Boulevard, Rochester, NY 14642
  • ,
  • Yoav Ben-Shlomo

      Affiliations

    • Department of Social Medicine, University of Bristol, Bristol
  • ,
  • Jon Heron

      Affiliations

    • Department of Community Medicine, University of Bristol, Bristol
  • ,
  • Jean Golding

      Affiliations

    • Department of Community Medicine, University of Bristol, Bristol
  • ,
  • Diana Adams

      Affiliations

    • Institute of Reproductive and Developmental Biology, Imperial College School of Medicine, London, United Kingdom
  • ,
  • Vivette Glover

      Affiliations

    • Institute of Reproductive and Developmental Biology, Imperial College School of Medicine, London, United Kingdom

Received 27 August 2004; received in revised form 10 January 2005; accepted 17 March 2005. published online 09 May 2005.

Background

Animal studies suggest that prenatal stress is associated with long-term disturbance in hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis function, but evidence in humans is lacking. This study examined the long-term association between prenatal anxiety and measures of diurnal cortisol at age 10 years.

Methods

Measures of cortisol were collected at awakening, 30 min after awakening, and at 4 pm and 9 pm on 3 consecutive days in a sample of 10-year-olds (n = 74) from the Avon Longitudinal Study of Parents and Children, a prospective longitudinal cohort study of mothers and children on whom measures of anxiety and depression were collected in pregnancy and the postpartum period. Analyses examined the links between symptoms of prenatal anxiety and multiple indicators of cortisol, an index of HPA axis functioning.

Results

Prenatal anxiety was significantly associated with individual differences in awakening and afternoon cortisol after accounting for obstetric and sociodemographic risk (partial correlations were .32 and .25, p < .05). The effect for awakening cortisol remained significant after controlling for multiple postnatal assessments of maternal anxiety and depression.

Conclusions

This study provides the first human evidence that prenatal anxiety might have lasting effects on HPA axis functioning in the child and that prenatal anxiety might constitute a mechanism for an increased vulnerability to psychopathology in children and adolescents.

Key Words:  Prenatal stress , cortisol , HPA axis , longitudinal follow-up , ALSPAC

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PII: S0006-3223(05)00377-X

doi:10.1016/j.biopsych.2005.03.032

Biological Psychiatry
Volume 58, Issue 3 , Pages 211-217, 1 August 2005