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Smoking during pregnancy linked to child’s risk of having congenital heart disease

Children born to mothers who smoked during pregnancy were at increased risk of having congenital heart disease, according to research we part-funded.

Person putting out cigarette in ashtray

The study was led by University of Bristol, in an international collaboration with researchers from seven institutions. It brings together data on more than 230,000 families from seven European birth cohorts from the UK, Ireland, the Netherlands, Denmark, Norway and Italy, including the world-renowned Children of the 90s study at the University of Bristol. 

Each day, around 13 babies in the UK are diagnosed with congenital heart disease. This means the heart or the large blood vessels surrounding the heart have not developed properly in the womb. Identifying causes of congenital heart disease could help prevent some of these cases and ultimately save lives.

The study analysed associations between body mass index, smoking, and alcohol consumption on offspring congenital heart disease. Data on these characteristics were obtained through measurements of weight and height and questionnaires administered during early pregnancy when most of the cohorts began recruitment. 

Measurements were harmonised across cohorts as part of the LifeCycle project; an initiative that aims to research the role of pregnancy and infancy factors on offspring health and wellbeing across childhood and into adulthood. The researchers were able to test the reliability of their findings by using an approach that compares the results from mothers and fathers to help discern whether the effects they see are 'real' or are as a result of other factors. 

More support is needed to help people quit smoking

Professor Deborah Lawlor, our Professor of Cardiovascular Science and Clinical Epidemiology at the University of Bristol oversaw the study. She said:

“Smoking rates are declining but remain high in more deprived groups in the UK and other high-income countries and are promoted in low- and middle-income countries.

“These findings further highlight the need to support smoking cessation globally. Also, if we can work out exactly how maternal smoking increases risk of congenital heart diseases this could identify new ways of preventing these diseases even in the absence of smoking.”

Dr Sonya Babu-Narayan, our Associate Medical Director and cardiologist, said:

“Smoking is one of the biggest risk factors for developing heart and circulatory disease. It is also the greatest cause of health inequality across Europe, but supporting people to quit smoking is one of the most effective things we can do to reduce these inequalities.

“We need to make it easier for everyone to quit by offering them appropriate smoking cessation support and advice.”

The research was also supported by the H2020 program of the European Commission.

Read our 10 tips for stopping smoking