Abstract

Introduction Cerebral palsy is the most common severe motor disability in childhood, but its etiology is incompletely understood. Studies have suggested that prenatal thyroid hormone disturbances affect child neurodevelopment and may alter motor function. Objective To investigate the association between maternal thyroid disorder in pregnancy and risk of cerebral palsy in the child in two large study populations in Denmark and Norway. Method We conducted a population-based cohort study using two study populations. (1) 1,270,079 children born in Denmark 1979–2007 identified in nationwide registers, and (2) 192,918 children born 1996–2009 recruited into the Danish National Birth Cohort and The Norwegian Mother and Child Cohort study, combined in the MOthers and BAbies in Norway and Denmark (MOBAND) collaboration cohort. Register based and self-reported information on maternal thyroid disorder were studied in relation to risk of cerebral palsy and its unilateral and bilateral spastic subtypes using multiple logistic regression. Information on CP was derived from the Danish and Norwegian National Cerebral Palsy Registries, and all CP cases registered from age one to age six years, which were verified by neuro-pediatricians, were included. Results In register data, hypothyroidism was recognized in 12,929 (1.0%), hyperthyroidism in 9943 (0.8%), and unclassifiable thyroid disorder in 753 ( Conclusion Maternal thyroid disorder was not related in this study to bilateral spastic CP, which is the predominant CP subtype, but we do find a higher risk of unilateral spastic CP in children of mothers whose thyroid disorders were identified in pregnancy. The offspring of such women are more likely to have been exposed to abnormal thyroid hormone levels in utero than the offspring of women whose thyroid disorders were diagnosed and treated prior to conception. A useful extension of our findings would be to see whether they can be replicated in studies making use of maternal blood samples.

Highlights

  • Cerebral palsy is the most frequent motor disability in childhood, but little is known about its etiology

  • Maternal thyroid disorder overall was not related to bilateral spastic cerebral palsy, but maternal thyroid disorder identified in pregnancy was associated with increased risk of unilateral spastic cerebral palsy

  • Thyroid hormone is required for many aspects of brain development, including myelination of nerve cells, and insufficient myelination is often present in individuals with Cerebral palsy (CP) [8, 15]

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Summary

Introduction

Cerebral palsy is the most frequent motor disability in childhood, but little is known about its etiology. It has been suggested that cerebral palsy risk may be increased by prenatal thyroid hormone disturbances. The objective of this study was to investigate whether maternal thyroid disorder is associated with increased risk of cerebral palsy. Endogenous fetal thyroid hormone production begins around 10-18th week of gestation. The fetus, depends on maternal thyroid hormone entirely in early pregnancy, and from mid-gestation fetal thyroid hormone. We aimed to investigate the association between maternal thyroid disorder in pregnancy and risk of cerebral palsy in the child in two study populations in Denmark and Norway, each one with a distinct research advantage. One study population permitted examination of different thyroid disorder and CP subtypes in a very large study sample, while the other provided opportunities for performing analyses that controlled for lifestyle factors

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