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Dan J Stein

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2

YNICL Journal 2025 Journal Article

The impact of prenatal alcohol and tobacco exposure on white matter integrity in 8–12-year-old children

  • Annerine Roos
  • Deborah Jonker
  • Eric Kan
  • Andrew T Marshall
  • Kirsten A Donald
  • Freda Scheffler
  • Lucy T Brink
  • Weslin Charles

The combined impact of prenatal alcohol exposure (PAE) and prenatal tobacco exposure (PTE) on white-matter integrity in pre-adolescence is poorly understood. We aimed to explore white-matter integrity in children aged 8- to 12-years with PAE and/or PTE versus those without (controls, CON). Here, 410 children (CON: n = 84; PAE: n = 94; PTE: n = 67; PAE + PTE: n = 165) underwent diffusion tensor MRI as part of the Safe Passage Study, a cohort based in Cape Town, South Africa. Linear regression modeling was used to investigate the main and interaction effects of PAE and PTE. There were disordinal PAE × PTE interactions on right-cerebral-peduncle mean, axial, and radial diffusivity: Individuals with PAE and PTE had higher mean and axial diffusivity than those with either exposure on its own, but similar to those with neither. In children with PAE, there were associations with altered axial diffusivity among those exposed during the first trimester and mean, axial, and radial diffusivity in those exposed during the second trimester in commissural, association, and projection tracts. Further, there were PTE associations with fractional anisotropy and radial diffusivity in projection tracts among those exposed mainly during the second trimester. These results support previous research in children with PAE and add to the PTE literature, highlighting potentially lasting impact on axonal and myelin microstructural development, which are important for motor, sensory, cognitive, and behavioral functions. Our results suggest sensitivity to the timing of exposure of PAE and PTE, particularly during the first and second trimesters of pregnancy.

YNIMG Journal 2020 Journal Article

Ethical issues in global neuroimaging genetics collaborations

  • Andrea Palk
  • Judy Illes
  • Paul M Thompson
  • Dan J Stein

Neuroimaging genetics is a rapidly developing field that combines neuropsychiatric genetics studies with imaging modalities to investigate how genetic variation influences brain structure and function. As both genetic and imaging technologies improve further, their combined power may hold translational potential in terms of improving psychiatric nosology, diagnosis, and treatment. While neuroimaging genetics studies offer a number of scientific advantages, they also face challenges. In response to some of these challenges, global neuroimaging genetics collaborations have been created to pool and compare brain data and replicate study findings. Attention has been paid to ethical issues in genetics, neuroimaging, and multi-site collaborative research, respectively, but there have been few substantive discussions of the ethical issues generated by the confluence of these areas in global neuroimaging genetics collaborations. Our discussion focuses on two areas: benefits and risks of global neuroimaging genetics collaborations and the potential impact of neuroimaging genetics research findings in low- and middle-income countries. Global neuroimaging genetics collaborations have the potential to enhance relations between countries and address global mental health challenges, however there are risks regarding inequity, exploitation and data sharing. Moreover, neuroimaging genetics research in low- and middle-income countries must address the issue of feedback of findings and the risk of essentializing and stigmatizing interpretations of mental disorders. We conclude by examining how the notion of solidarity, informed by an African Ethics framework, may justify some of the suggestions made in our discussion.