The association between maternal immune activation and brain structure and function in human offspring: a systematic review

IF 9.6 1区 医学 Q1 BIOCHEMISTRY & MOLECULAR BIOLOGY
Anna Suleri, Anna-Sophie Rommel, Olga Dmitrichenko, Ryan L. Muetzel, Charlotte A. M. Cecil, Lot de Witte, Veerle Bergink
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Abstract

Maternal immune activation (MIA) during pregnancy, as a result of infectious or inflammatory stimuli, has gained increasing attention for its potential role in adverse child neurodevelopment, with studies focusing on associations in children born preterm. This systematic review summarizes research on the link between several types of prenatal MIA and subsequent child structural and/or functional brain development outcomes. We identified 111 neuroimaging studies in five MIA areas: inflammatory biomarkers (n = 13), chorioamnionitis (n = 18), other types of infections (n = 18), human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) (n = 42), and Zika virus (n = 20). Overall, there was large heterogeneity in the type of MIA exposure examined and in study methodology. Most studies had a prospective single cohort design and mainly focused on potential effects on the brain up to one year after birth. The median sample size was 53 participants. Severe infections, i.e., HIV and Zika virus, were associated with various types of cerebral lesions (e.g., microcephaly, atrophy, or periventricular leukomalacia) that were consistently identified across studies. For less severe infections and chronic inflammation, findings were generally inconsistent and mostly included deviations in white matter structure/function. Current findings have been mainly observed in the infants’ brain, presenting an opportunity for future studies to investigate whether these associations persist throughout development. Additionally, the inconsistent findings, encompassing both regions of interest and null results, call into question whether prenatal exposure to less severe infections and chronic inflammation exerts a small effect or no effect on child brain development.

Abstract Image

母体免疫激活与人类后代大脑结构和功能的关系:系统综述
孕期因感染或炎症刺激导致的母体免疫激活(MIA)因其在不利儿童神经发育中的潜在作用而受到越来越多的关注,其研究重点是早产儿的相关性。本系统综述总结了几种类型的产前 MIA 与儿童随后的大脑结构和/或功能发育结果之间关系的研究。我们确定了 111 项神经影像学研究,涉及五个 MIA 领域:炎症生物标记物(n = 13)、绒毛膜羊膜炎(n = 18)、其他类型感染(n = 18)、人类免疫缺陷病毒(HIV)(n = 42)和寨卡病毒(n = 20)。总体而言,所研究的 MIA 暴露类型和研究方法存在很大的异质性。大多数研究采用前瞻性单一队列设计,主要关注出生后一年内对大脑的潜在影响。样本量的中位数为 53 人。严重感染(如艾滋病毒和寨卡病毒)与各种类型的脑损伤(如小头畸形、脑萎缩或脑室周围白斑)有关,这些病变在各项研究中均有发现。对于不太严重的感染和慢性炎症,研究结果通常不一致,主要包括白质结构/功能的偏差。目前的发现主要是在婴儿大脑中观察到的,这为今后的研究提供了机会,以调查这些关联是否会在整个发育过程中持续存在。此外,不一致的研究结果既包括感兴趣的区域,也包括无效结果,这让人怀疑产前暴露于较轻的感染和慢性炎症是否对儿童大脑发育影响很小或没有影响。
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来源期刊
Molecular Psychiatry
Molecular Psychiatry 医学-精神病学
CiteScore
20.50
自引率
4.50%
发文量
459
审稿时长
4-8 weeks
期刊介绍: Molecular Psychiatry focuses on publishing research that aims to uncover the biological mechanisms behind psychiatric disorders and their treatment. The journal emphasizes studies that bridge pre-clinical and clinical research, covering cellular, molecular, integrative, clinical, imaging, and psychopharmacology levels.
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