Lotfipour_2014_Addiction_109_1718

Reference

Title : Maternal cigarette smoking during pregnancy predicts drug use via externalizing behavior in two community-based samples of adolescents - Lotfipour_2014_Addiction_109_1718
Author(s) : Lotfipour S , Ferguson E , Leonard G , Miettunen J , Perron M , Pike GB , Richer L , Seguin JR , Veillette S , Jarvelin MR , Moilanen I , Maki P , Nordstrom T , Pausova Z , Veijola J , Paus T
Ref : Addiction , 109 :1718 , 2014
Abstract :

BACKGROUND AND AIMS: Prenatal exposure to maternal cigarette smoking (PEMCS) is associated with a higher probability of substance use in adolescence. We explore if externalizing behavior mediates this relationship, while controlling for a number of potential covariates of this mediation process.
METHODS: We used data obtained in two geographically distinct community samples of adolescents. The first (cross-sectional) sample consisted of 996 adolescents (12-18 years of age) recruited from the Saguenay Youth Study (SYS) in Canada (47% with PEMCS). The second (longitudinal) sample consisted of 1141 adolescents (49% with PEMCS) from the Northern Finland Birth Cohort (NFBC1986). In both samples, externalizing behavior and substance use were assessed during adolescence. In the NFBC1986 cohort, externalizing behavior was also assessed in childhood.
RESULTS: In both populations, PEMCS is associated with a higher likelihood of adolescent drug experimentation. In the NFBC1986 cohort, exposed (versus non-exposed) adolescents experiment with an extra 1.27 [B = 0.24, 95% confidence intervals (CI) = 0.15, 0.33 P < 0.001] drugs. In the SYS cohort, a clear protective effect of not being exposed is shown: non-exposed (versus exposed) adolescents are 1.5 times [B = -0.42, 95% CI = -0.75, -0.09, P = 0.013] less likely to take drugs. These associations between PEMCS and drug experimentation remain in the multivariate and mediational analyses.
CONCLUSIONS: Prenatal exposure to maternal cigarette smoking appears to be associated with a higher probability of experimenting with drugs during adolescence, both directly and indirectly via externalizing behavior and the number of peers reported as using drugs.

PubMedSearch : Lotfipour_2014_Addiction_109_1718
PubMedID: 24942256

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Citations formats

Lotfipour S, Ferguson E, Leonard G, Miettunen J, Perron M, Pike GB, Richer L, Seguin JR, Veillette S, Jarvelin MR, Moilanen I, Maki P, Nordstrom T, Pausova Z, Veijola J, Paus T (2014)
Maternal cigarette smoking during pregnancy predicts drug use via externalizing behavior in two community-based samples of adolescents
Addiction 109 :1718

Lotfipour S, Ferguson E, Leonard G, Miettunen J, Perron M, Pike GB, Richer L, Seguin JR, Veillette S, Jarvelin MR, Moilanen I, Maki P, Nordstrom T, Pausova Z, Veijola J, Paus T (2014)
Addiction 109 :1718