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Does paternal alcohol consumption affect the severity of traits of fetal alcohol spectrum disorders?

  • Philip A. May
  • , Julie M. Hasken
  • , Jason Blankenship
  • , Anna Susan Marais
  • , J. Phillip Gossage
  • , Wendy O. Kalberg
  • , Marlene De Vries
  • , Luther K. Robinson
  • , David Buckley
  • , Melanie Manning
  • , Charles D.H. Parry
  • , H. Eugene Hoyme
  • , Barbara Tabachnick
  • , Soraya Seedat

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Background: Animal models suggest that paternal alcohol consumption may influence offspring traits, yet few human studies exist. Methods: Data from population-based studies of fetal alcohol spectrum disorders (FASD) among first-grade students provided case–control data to explore traits of fathers of children with: FASD, alcohol exposure, and unexposed controls. Results: Most males in this population drank, but more fathers of children with FASD drank during pregnancy ((Formula presented.) = 73.2%) than fathers of controls ((Formula presented.) = 63.4%). Among drinkers, fathers of children with FASD: (a) consumed more drinks per occasion than controls ((Formula presented.) = 11.5 vs. 9.7 for maternally exposed controls and 8.1 for maternally unexposed controls), (b) drank more frequently and binged, and (c) were reported to have had a drinking problem ((Formula presented.) = 27.8% vs. (Formula presented.) = 18.8%). Partial correlations, controlling for maternal average drinks per drinking day (DDD) by trimester and maternal tobacco use, indicated a significant, negative association between paternal heavy/binge drinking (≥5) and child outcomes resulting in a significant reduction in child height, head circumference, and verbal IQ. Categorical analysis of combined levels of maternal and paternal drinking indicated a significant mean reduction in child height, head circumference, and verbal IQ centile, and a significant increase in total dysmorphology score, did not occur without maternal drinking. Combined paternal and maternal drinking pattern analysis also indicated that paternal drinking was not independently associated with child total dysmorphology scores or neurocognitive outcomes. Models of maternal and paternal drinking were significant, but main and significant effects on total dysmorphology and neurocognitive outcomes were via maternal alcohol consumption. Likewise, paternal alcohol consumption was not independently associated with an FASD diagnosis when controlling for prenatal maternal alcohol and tobacco use. Conclusions: Paternal alcohol consumption was associated with an independent, negative influence on child height, head circumference, and verbal IQ. Maternal drinking, when combined with heavy male drinking, was associated with more severe FASD outcomes.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)1716-1729
Number of pages14
JournalAlcohol, Clinical and Experimental Research
Volume49
Issue number8
DOIs
StatePublished - Aug 2025

Keywords

  • South Africa
  • alcohol use and abuse
  • dysmorphology
  • fetal alcohol spectrum disorders
  • paternal alcohol use
  • prenatal alcohol use

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