Format
Scientific article
Publication Date
Published by / Citation
V.J. Monnelly et al. Prenatal methadone exposure is associated with altered neonatal brain development. NeuroImage: Clinical 18 (2018) 9–14 https://doi.org/10.1016/j.nicl.2017.12.033
Original Language

English

Country
United Kingdom
Keywords
prenatal
Methadone
brain
neonate
MRI
Opioid

Prenatal Methadone Exposure Is Associated with Altered Neonatal Brain Development

Abstract

Methadone(link is external) is used for medication-assisted treatment of heroin addiction(link is external) during pregnancy. The neurodevelopmental(link is external) outcome of children with prenatal(link is external) methadone exposure can be sub-optimal. We tested the hypothesis that brain development is altered among newborn infants whose mothers were prescribed methadone.

20 methadone-exposed neonates(link is external) born after 37 weeks' postmenstrual age (PMA) and 20 non-exposed controls underwent diffusion MRI(link is external) at mean PMA of 39+ 2 and 41+ 1 weeks, respectively. An age-optimized Tract-based Spatial Statistics (TBSS) pipeline was used to perform voxel-wise statistical comparison of fractional anisotropy(link is external) (FA) data between exposed and non-exposed neonates.

Methadone-exposed neonates had decreased FA within the centrum semiovale(link is external)inferior longitudinal fasciculi(link is external) (ILF) and the internal and external capsules(link is external) after adjustment for GA at MRI(link is external) (p < 0.05, TFCE corrected). Median FA across the white matter(link is external) skeleton was 12% lower among methadone-exposed infants. Mean head circumference (HC) z-scores were lower in the methadone-exposed group (− 0.52 (0.99) vs 1.15 (0.84), p < 0.001); after adjustment for HC z-scores, differences in FA remained in the anterior and posterior limbs(link is external) of the internal capsule and the ILF. Polydrug use(link is external) among cases was common.

Prenatal methadone exposure is associated with microstructural alteration in major white matter tracts, which is present at birth and is independent of head growth. Although the findings cannot be attributed to methadone per se, the data indicate that further research to determine optimal management of opioid use disorder during pregnancy is required. Future studies should evaluate childhood outcomes including infant brain development and long-term neurocognitive function.

 

Highlights

• Prenatal methadone exposure is associated with atypical white matter development.

• Reduced FA in the white matter skeleton is apparent soon after birth.

• Polydrug use among cases limits causal inference.

• Infant brain development should be evaluated in studies of opioid use in pregnancy.