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Annual Research Review: Prenatal opioid exposure - a two-generation approach to conceptualizing neurodevelopmental outcomes.
Abstract
Opioid use during pregnancy impacts the health and well-being of two generations:
the pregnant person and the child. The factors that increase risk for opioid use in
the adult, as well as those that perpetuate risk for the caregiver and child, oftentimes
replicate across generations and may be more likely to affect child neurodevelopment
than the opioid exposure itself. In this article, we review the prenatal opioid exposure
literature with the perspective that this is not a singular event but an intergenerational
cascade of events. We highlight several mechanisms of transmission across generations:
biological factors, including genetics and epigenetics and the gut-brain axis; parent-child
mechanisms, such as prepregnancy experience of child maltreatment, quality of parenting,
infant behaviors, neonatal opioid withdrawal diagnosis, and broader environmental
contributors including poverty, violence exposure, stigma, and Child Protective Services
involvement. We conclude by describing ways in which intergenerational transmission
can be disrupted by early intervention.
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Journal articlePermalink
https://hdl.handle.net/10161/26696Published Version (Please cite this version)
10.1111/jcpp.13761Publication Info
Conradt, Elisabeth; Camerota, Marie; Maylott, Sarah; & Lester, Barry M (2023). Annual Research Review: Prenatal opioid exposure - a two-generation approach to conceptualizing
neurodevelopmental outcomes. Journal of child psychology and psychiatry, and allied disciplines. 10.1111/jcpp.13761. Retrieved from https://hdl.handle.net/10161/26696.This is constructed from limited available data and may be imprecise. To cite this
article, please review & use the official citation provided by the journal.
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Show full item recordScholars@Duke
Elisabeth D Conradt
Associate Professor in Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences
As a clinical and developmental psychologist, my mission is to promote infant and
early childhood mental health. My scientific focus is to better understand the intergenerational
transmission of risk for mental health problems. In the CAN lab we document how exposures
the pregnant person had throughout the lifespan can impact the pregnancy, preterm
birth risk, newborn neurodevelopment, and susceptibility for psychopathology. Emotion
dysregulation is a transdiagnostic, early-emerging marker of

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