Prenatal Alcohol Consumption Between Conception and Recognition of Pregnancy

BACKGROUND Current estimates of the rates of alcohol-exposed pregnancies may underestimate prenatal alcohol exposure if alcohol consumption in early trimester 1, prior to awareness of pregnancy, is not considered. Extant literature describes predictors of alcohol consumption during pregnancy; however, alcohol consumption prior to awareness of pregnancy is a distinct behavior from consumption after becoming aware of pregnancy and thus may be associated with different predictors. The purpose of this study was therefore to examine prevalence and predictors of alcohol consumption by women prior to awareness of their pregnancy, and trajectories of change to alcohol use following pregnancy recognition. METHODS Pregnant women (n = 1,403) were prospectively recruited from general antenatal clinics of 4 public hospitals in Australian metropolitan areas between 2008 and 2013. Women completed detailed interviews about alcohol use before and after recognition of pregnancy. RESULTS Most women (n = 850, 60.6%) drank alcohol between conception and pregnancy recognition. Binge and heavy drinking were more prevalent than low-level drinking. The proportion of women who drank alcohol reduced to 18.3% (n = 257) after recognition of pregnancy. Of women who drank alcohol, 70.5% ceased drinking, 18.3% reduced consumption, and 11.1% made no reduction following awareness of pregnancy. Socioeconomic status (SES) was the strongest predictor of alcohol use, with drinkers more likely to be of high rather than low SES compared with abstainers (OR = 3.30, p < 0.001). Factors associated with different trajectories (either cessation, reduction, or continuation of drinking) included level of alcohol use prior to pregnancy recognition, age, pregnancy planning, and illicit substance use. CONCLUSIONS In this sample of relatively high SES women, most women ceased or reduced drinking once aware of their pregnancy. However, the rate of alcohol-exposed pregnancies was higher than previous estimates when the period prior to pregnancy recognition was taken into account.

[1]  Paul A. Romitti,et al.  Alcohol Consumption by Women Before and During Pregnancy , 2009, Maternal and Child Health Journal.

[2]  W. Hellerstedt,et al.  Correlates of Prenatal Alcohol Use , 2008, Maternal and Child Health Journal.

[3]  R. Mattick,et al.  Alcohol use in pregnancy: prevalence and predictors in the Longitudinal Study of Australian Children. , 2013, Drug and alcohol review.

[4]  P. Forder,et al.  Predictors of antenatal alcohol use among Australian women: a prospective cohort study , 2013, BJOG : an international journal of obstetrics and gynaecology.

[5]  E. Orav,et al.  Brief Intervention for Prenatal Alcohol Use: A Randomized Trial , 2005, Obstetrics and gynecology.

[6]  J. Najman,et al.  Women's frequency of alcohol consumption prior to pregnancy and at their pregnancy-booking visit 2001-2006: A cohort study. , 2015, Women and birth : journal of the Australian College of Midwives.

[7]  R. Caetano,et al.  The epidemiology of drinking among women of child-bearing age. , 2006, Alcoholism, clinical and experimental research.

[8]  M. Sobell Alcohol-exposed pregnancy: characteristics associated with risk. , 2002, American journal of preventive medicine.

[9]  H. Johnson,et al.  A comparison of 'traditional' and multimedia information systems development practices , 2003, Inf. Softw. Technol..

[10]  T. Fahey,et al.  Prevalence, predictors and perinatal outcomes of peri-conceptional alcohol exposure - retrospective cohort study in an urban obstetric population in Ireland , 2011, BMC pregnancy and childbirth.

[11]  J. Kurinczuk,et al.  Alcohol consumption during pregnancy in nonindigenous west Australian women. , 2007, Alcoholism, clinical and experimental research.

[12]  Jennifer C. Kastello,et al.  Determinants of alcohol cessation, reduction and no reduction during pregnancy , 2014, Archives of Gynecology and Obstetrics.

[13]  S. Popova,et al.  A comparison of the prevalence of prenatal alcohol exposure obtained via maternal self-reports versus meconium testing: a systematic literature review and meta-analysis , 2014, BMC Pregnancy and Childbirth.

[14]  Sandra C. Jones,et al.  What influences Australian women to not drink alcohol during pregnancy? , 2012, Australian journal of primary health.

[15]  P. Sampson,et al.  Moderate prenatal alcohol exposure: effects on child IQ and learning problems at age 7 1/2 years. , 1990, Alcoholism, clinical and experimental research.

[16]  M. Cogswell,et al.  The association of mild, moderate, and binge prenatal alcohol exposure and child neuropsychological outcomes: a meta-analysis. , 2014, Alcoholism, clinical and experimental research.

[17]  U. Kesmodel,et al.  Use of alcohol and illicit drugs among pregnant Danish women, 1998 , 2003, Scandinavian journal of public health.

[18]  Alexis J. Hure,et al.  Risky Drinking Patterns Are Being Continued into Pregnancy: A Prospective Cohort Study , 2014, PloS one.

[19]  F. Kay-Lambkin,et al.  Determinants of pregnant women's compliance with alcohol guidelines: a prospective cohort study , 2012, BMC Public Health.

[20]  C. Denny,et al.  Vital Signs: Alcohol-Exposed Pregnancies--United States, 2011-2013. , 2016, MMWR. Morbidity and mortality weekly report.

[21]  J. F. Nicholson Use of Alcohol , 1861, The Hospital.

[22]  D. Stoffer,et al.  Prenatal exposure to alcohol: effect on infant growth and morphologic characteristics. , 1989, Pediatrics.

[23]  E. Racine,et al.  Caution! Warning Labels About Alcohol and Pregnancy: Unintended Consequences and Questionable Effectiveness , 2015, The American journal of bioethics : AJOB.

[24]  S. Zubrick,et al.  A new method of prenatal alcohol classification accounting for dose, pattern and timing of exposure: improving our ability to examine fetal effects from low to moderate alcohol , 2009, Journal of Epidemiology & Community Health.

[25]  A. Shakeshaft,et al.  Geographic and maternal characteristics associated with alcohol use in pregnancy. , 2011, Alcoholism, clinical and experimental research.

[26]  J. Reynolds,et al.  It’s a Shame! Stigma Against Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorder: Examining the Ethical Implications for Public Health Practices and Policies , 2016 .

[27]  Patricia Harrison,et al.  Alcohol and Drug Use Before and During Pregnancy: An Examination of Use Patterns and Predictors of Cessation , 2009, Maternal and Child Health Journal.

[28]  E. Racine,et al.  Public Discourse on the Biology of Alcohol Addiction: Implications for Stigma, Self-Control, Essentialism, and Coercive Policies in Pregnancy , 2015 .

[29]  J. Jacobson,et al.  Validity of maternal report of prenatal alcohol, cocaine, and smoking in relation to neurobehavioral outcome. , 2002, Pediatrics.

[30]  H. Simhan,et al.  Can we communicate gravidity and parity better? , 2009, Obstetrics and gynecology.

[31]  E. Abel An update on incidence of FAS: FAS is not an equal opportunity birth defect. , 1995, Neurotoxicology and teratology.

[32]  M. Cedergren,et al.  Alcohol use before and during pregnancy and factors influencing change among Swedish women , 2008, Acta obstetricia et gynecologica Scandinavica.

[33]  C. Binns,et al.  Patterns of alcohol intake of pregnant and lactating women in Perth, Australia. , 2007, Drug and alcohol review.

[34]  J. Connor,et al.  Maternal factors associated with heavy periconceptional alcohol intake and drinking following pregnancy recognition: a post-partum survey of New Zealand women. , 2013, Drug and alcohol review.

[35]  N. Henley,et al.  Women's knowledge and attitudes regarding alcohol consumption in pregnancy: a national survey , 2010, BMC public health.

[36]  M. Rotheram-Borus,et al.  Predictors of alcohol use prior to pregnancy recognition among township women in Cape Town, South Africa. , 2011, Social science & medicine.