# Neurodevelopmental outcome at two years of age and predictive value of General Movement Assessment in infants exposed to alcohol and/or drugs during pregnancy: a prospective cohort study

**Authors:** Toril Fjørtoft, Merethe Brandal, Lars Adde, Siril Osland, Hilde Rygh, Tordis Ustad, Kari Anne I. Evensen

PMC · DOI: 10.1186/s12887-024-05046-w · BMC Pediatrics · 2024-09-21

## TL;DR

Children exposed to alcohol or drugs during pregnancy had worse neurodevelopment at two years, and early motor assessments showed some predictive value.

## Contribution

This study evaluates the predictive value of early motor assessments for neurodevelopmental outcomes in children exposed to alcohol and/or drugs in utero.

## Key findings

- Exposed children had significantly lower cognitive, language, and motor scores at two years compared to controls.
- Suboptimal fidgety movements and monotonous movement character showed high sensitivity but low specificity for predicting poor outcomes.
- The MOS-R had moderate sensitivity and specificity, indicating limited predictive power.

## Abstract

Exposure to alcohol and/or other addictive drugs in pregnancy is a documented risk factor for neurological impairment. We aimed to assess neurodevelopmental outcome at two years of age in infants exposed to prenatal alcohol and/or other addictive drugs and to examine the predictive value of early motor assessment.

This was a follow-up at two years of age in the prospective cohort study Children Exposed to Alcohol and/or Drugs in Intrauterine Life (CEADIL). The exposed group comprised 73 infants recruited from primary health care and included in a hospital follow-up programme at St. Olavs Hospital, Trondheim University Hospital, Norway. The control group comprised 93 healthy, unexposed infants recruited from the maternity ward at the same hospital. All children had been assessed by physiotherapists using the General Movement Assessment (GMA) at three months of age. Presence of fidgety movements, movement character and the Motor Optimality Score – Revised (MOS-R) were used. At two years of age, the children were assessed by trained examiners using the Bayley Scales of Infant and Toddler Development – Third Edition (BSID-III), Ages & Stages Questionnaires: Social-Emotional (ASQ:SE) and the Hollingshead Two-Factor Index of Social Position (SES).

The cognitive, language and motor composite scores of BSID-III were considerably lower in the exposed group than in the control group. Mean differences adjusted for age and parental SES ranged from − 13.3 (95% confidence interval, CI: -18.6 to -8.0) to -17.7 (95% CI: -23.3 to -12.2). Suboptimal fidgety movements and monotonous movement character had high sensitivity (0.94 to 0.74), but low specificity (0.10 to 0.32), while sensitivity and specificity of the MOS-R was around 50 and 60%, respectively.

Neurodevelopmental outcome at two years of age was poorer in a group of children exposed to alcohol and/or drugs in pregnancy compared with a control group of healthy, unexposed children. Sensitivity of suboptimal fidgety movements and monotonous movement character at three months of age for later neurodevelopmental outcome was high to acceptable, but the MOS-R had limited sensitivity.

## Linked entities

- **Chemicals:** alcohol (PubChem CID 702)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** addictive drugs (MESH:D019966), neurological impairment (MESH:D009422), fidgety movements (MESH:D009069)

## Full text

_Full body text omitted from this summary view._ Fetch the complete paper as Markdown: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11416026/full.md

## Figures

1 figure with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11416026/full.md

## References

4 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11416026/full.md

---
Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11416026