Maternal anxiety or depression and cognitive ability in young male offspring: A population-based cohort study using cognitive test scores from the Danish Conscription Board Examination
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Purpose We aimed to study how the timing of incident maternal emotional disorders is associated with male offspring's cognitive ability in early adulthood using cognitive test data from military conscription in a population-based cohort. Methods We linked all males (conscripts) born in Denmark 1996–2001 to parental hospital records to identify anxiety or depression (emotional disorders). Linear regression assessed the association between the timing of the first maternal diagnosis (before, during, or after birth (0–1, 1–5, 6–17 years)) and cognitive ability measured at the Danish Conscription Board Examination 2014–2019. Paternal emotional disorders served as negative controls to differentiate maternal pregnancy exposures from genetic and postnatal influences. Results The study included 119,387 males, with 9,959 (8.3%) having mothers diagnosed with emotional disorders. Offspring exposed to maternal emotional disorders had lower cognitive test scores (ranging from − 0.22 to -0.10 standard deviations (SD) lower than unexposed) at mean age 18, particularly if the mother was diagnosed during pregnancy (-0.22 SD, 95% CI: -0.36; -0.08). Paternal emotional disorders were also linked to a lower cognitive test score, but showed more consistent associations across all time points (-0.18 to -0.14 SD lower than unexposed). Conclusion Maternal emotional disorders were overall associated with male offspring's long-term cognitive ability. Paternal disorders showed similar associations. While the findings require cautious interpretation, the findings suggest a weak signal of a window of sensitivity for maternal disorders during gestation, with no equivalent signal for paternal disorders. We encourage similar studies with female offspring.