Sarah J. Lewis, PhD, from the University of Bristol in the United Kingdom, and colleagues used a large population-based study of women recruited during pregnancy to examine whether the association between genetic variants in alcohol metabolizing genes in women and their children correlates with the child's cognitive score at age 8.
The researchers found that, among 4,167 children, four genetic variants in alcohol metabolizing genes correlated strongly with lower IQ. A risk allele score based on these four variants also correlated with lower IQ at age 8. This effect was not seen among children whose mothers abstained during pregnancy but was seen for offspring of mothers who were moderate drinkers (one to six units per week during pregnancy; per allele effect estimates, −1.80; P = 0.00002). For mothers who drank during pregnancy, there was a further genetic variant associated with alcohol metabolism in mothers that correlated with child IQ.