2 research outputs found
Skunk River Fall 1998
https://openspace.dmacc.edu/skunkriver/1019/thumbnail.jp
Cognitive development in children up to age 11 years born after ART—a longitudinal cohort study
STUDY QUESTION: How does the cognitive development of children conceived after ART (IVF
and ICSI) –measured as cognitive skills at age 3, 5, 7 and 11 years – differ over time from those
born after natural conception (NC)?
SUMMARY ANSWER: Improved measures of cognitive development up to age 5 years were
recorded in children conceived with ART compared to NC, which attenuates by 11 years, with ART
children still scoring slightly better than NC children. The fact that ART conceived children have
higher cognitive function is largely attributed to the specific characteristics of ART parents, who are
on average older and with higher education and socio-economic status.
WHAT IS KNOWN ALREADY: Results on the cognitive outcomes of children conceived after
ART have been highly contradictory. Some have shown that ART children have an impaired
behavioral, socio-emotional and cognitive development and higher risk of mental disorders. Others
have reported no increased risk or difference. Cognitive development has not been previously
examined using latent growth curve models from ages 3 to 11 years, also including appropriate
attention to confounding parental characteristics.
STUDY DESIGN, SIZE, DURATION: Longitudinal data for the first five waves (2000-2012) of
the UK Millennium Cohort Study were used, which is a two-stage sample of all infants born in
2000-1 and resident in the UK at 9 months of age, drawn from the Department of Social Security
Child Benefit Registers. A final sample of N=15,218 children (125 IVF and 61 ICSI), from 14,816
families was used. Information was available for all waves for 8,298 children. Four additional
follow-up surveys were conducted in 2003, 2005, 2007 and 2012.
PARTICIPANTS/MATERIALS, SETTING, METHODS: Our sample includes children born
within a union (married or cohabiting parents) and where information on cognitive scores was
available for at least two measurement points. Cognitive development was assessed with the British
Ability Scales. At age 3 and 5 years (wave 2 and 3), children completed the naming vocabulary
component, which measures expressive verbal ability. At age 7 years (wave 4), verbal cognitive
abilities were assessed through the word reading test, and at age 11 years (wave 5) through a verbal
similarity test. Two-tailed Student’s t-tests examined differences between ART and NC groups.
Growth curve models (random-coefficient, latent trajectory models) were used to study the effect of
ART, confounding parental characteristics and health outcomes at birth, both at a baseline level of
cognitive ability at age 3 years and on its growth rate.
MAIN RESULTS AND THE ROLE OF CHANCE:
At age 3 and 5 years, children conceived with the aid of ART have higher verbal cognitive abilities
than NC children (p<0.001) but this consistently decreases over time and diminishes by age 11
years. Parental environment and resources are pivotal in children’s cognitive development
(AUTHOR: do you mean that these factors had a statistically significant impact on these abilities?
Please add the relevant information. Thank you.).
LIMITATIONS, REASON FOR CAUTION:
The sample size of the ART cohort of children is small across each time period (N =150–180) in
comparison with NC children (N = 10,496–11,955). Owing to a limited sample size, we are also
unable to compare IVF versus ICSI treatment.
WIDER IMPLICATIONS OF THE FINDINGS: With the increasing use of IVF and ICSI, these
results indicate that there are no detrimental effects on children’s early cognitive outcomes up to
age 11 years, and highlight the importance of parental characteristics