Abstract

Foetal alcohol spectrum disorders (FASDs) are a leading cause of developmental disability. Prenatal alcohol use is the sole necessary cause of FASD, but it is not always sufficient. Multiple factors influence a child’s susceptibility to FASD following prenatal alcohol exposure. Much of the FASD risk factor literature has been limited to discussions of association, rather than causation. While knowledge of predictor variables is important for identifying who is most at risk of FASD and for targeting interventions, causal knowledge is important for identifying effective mechanisms for prevention and intervention programmes. We conducted a systematic search and narrative synthesis of the evidence and used this to create a causal diagram (directed acyclic graph; DAG) to describe the causal pathways to FASD. Our results show that the aetiology of FASD is multifaceted and complex. FASD risk is determined by a range of lifestyle, sociodemographic, maternal, social, gestational, and genetic factors. The causal diagram that we present in this review provides a comprehensive summary of causal risk factors for FASD and can be used as a tool to inform data collection and statistical modelling strategies to minimise bias in future studies of FASD.

Highlights

  • Foetal alcohol spectrum disorder (FASD) is an umbrella term that is used to describe a range of lifelong disabilities caused by prenatal alcohol exposure [1]

  • We present the narrative synthesis of evidence that supports the inclusion of factors in the directed acyclic graphs (DAGs), and their position, followed by a worked example of how the DAG can be used to inform statistical modelling strategies

  • In Online Resource 4, we provide a more detailed description of the groupings of variables that were derived following the evidence synthesis, to enable further comparison of the literature review with the causal relationships depicted in the DAG

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Summary

Introduction

Foetal alcohol spectrum disorder (FASD) is an umbrella term that is used to describe a range of lifelong disabilities caused by prenatal alcohol exposure [1]. Population of Europe and North America have FASD, making it one of the leading causes of preventable developmental disability worldwide [3, 4]. Maternal alcohol use is the sole necessary cause of FASD, but it is not always sufficient [5]. Among women who drink any amount of alcohol in pregnancy, an estimated one in 13 will have a child with FASD and one in 67 will have a child with foetal alcohol syndrome (FAS) [4, 6]. Rather than a simple causal chain, the image of a spider’s web has been considered most appropriate for describing the causal context of FASD [8]

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