Parental Age in Relation to Offspring's Neurodevelopment

S A M Veldkamp, M A J Zondervan-Zwijnenburg*, Elsje van Bergen, S A Barzeva, N Tamayo-Martinez, A I Becht, C E M van Beijsterveldt, W Meeus, S Branje, M H J Hillegers, A J Oldehinkel, H J A Hoijtink, D I Boomsma, C Hartman

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

7 Citations (Scopus)
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Abstract

Objective: Advanced parenthood increases the risk of severe neurodevelopmental disorders like autism, Down syndrome and schizophrenia. Does advanced parenthood also negatively impact offspring's general neurodevelopment?Method: We analyzed child-, father-, mother- and teacher-rated attention-problems (N = 38,024), and standardized measures of intelligence (N = 10,273) and educational achievement (N = 17,522) of children from four Dutch population-based cohorts. The mean age over cohorts varied from 9.73-13.03. Most participants were of Dutch origin, ranging from 58.7%-96.7% over cohorts. We analyzed 50% of the data to generate hypotheses and the other 50% to evaluate support for these hypotheses. We aggregated the results over cohorts with Bayesian research synthesis.Results: We mostly found negative linear relations between parental age and attention-problems, meaning that offspring of younger parents tended to have more attention problems. Maternal age was positively and linearly related to offspring's IQ and educational achievement. Paternal age showed an attenuating positive relation with educational achievement and an inverted U-shape relation with IQ, with offspring of younger and older fathers at a disadvantage. Only the associations with maternal age remained after including SES. The inclusion of child gender in the model did not affect the relation between parental age and the study outcomes.Conclusions: Effects were small but significant, with better outcomes for children born to older parents. Older parents tended to be of higher SES. Indeed, the positive relation between parental age and offspring neurodevelopmental outcomes was partly confounded by SES.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)632-644
Number of pages13
JournalJournal of Clinical Child and Adolescent Psychology
Volume50
Issue number5
Early online date18-May-2020
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2021

Keywords

  • ATTENTION-DEFICIT/HYPERACTIVITY DISORDER
  • PATERNAL AGE
  • MATERNAL AGE
  • ENVIRONMENT
  • RISK
  • LITERACY
  • ADHD

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