Abstract

To identify attention profiles at 7 and 13 years, and transitions in attention profiles over time in children born very preterm (VP; <30 weeks' gestation) and full term (FT), and examine predictors of attention profiles and transitions. Participants were 167 VP and 60 FT children, evaluated on profiles across five attention domains (selective, shifting and divided attention, processing speed, and behavioral attention) at 7 and 13 years using latent profile analyses. Transitions in profiles were assessed with contingency tables. For VP children, biological and social risk factors were tested as predictors with a multinomial logistic regression. At 7 and 13 years, three distinct profiles of attentional functioning were identified. VP children were 2-3 times more likely to show poorer attention profiles compared with FT children. Transition patterns between 7 and 13 years were stable average, stable low, improving, and declining attention. VP children were two times less likely to have a stable average attention pattern and three times more likely to have stable low or improving attention patterns compared with FT children. Groups did not differ in declining attention patterns. For VP children, brain abnormalities on neonatal MRI and greater social risk at 7 years predicted stable low or changing attention patterns over time. VP children show greater variability in attention profiles and transition patterns than FT children, with almost half of the VP children showing adverse attention patterns over time. Early brain pathology and social environment are markers for attentional functioning.

Highlights

  • Attention is a multidimensional construct, comprising separate yet inter-dependent cognitive and behavioral components

  • Given that neonatal and social risk factors have been previously associated with poorer attentional functioning (Eryigit-Madzwamuse & Wolke, 2015; Lean et al, 2017; McGrath et al, 2005; Murray et al, 2014), we examined whether these factors predicted transitions in profiles between 7 and 13 years in very preterm (VP) children

  • This study identified three distinct profiles of attention functioning at 7 and 13 years of age in a cohort of VP and full term (FT)

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

Attention is a multidimensional construct, comprising separate yet inter-dependent cognitive and behavioral components. One recent study of 6-year-old children born moderate-to-late preterm (32–36 weeks’ gestation) reported several distinct profiles of attention, including subgroups with average attention functioning, generalized attention difficulties, specific cognitive attention difficulties, and specific behavioral attention difficulties (Bogičevic, Verhoeven, & van Baar, 2020). Such distinct profiles of attention have yet to be explored in children born VP, who are at increased risk of attention difficulties and may as well exhibit more individual variability in attention profiles. Madzwamuse & Wolke, 2015; Lean et al, 2017; McGrath et al, 2005; Murray et al, 2014), we examined whether these factors predicted transitions in profiles between 7 and 13 years in VP children

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