@Article{info:doi/10.2196/58337, author="Kato, Daigo and Okuno, Akiko and Ishikawa, Tetsuo and Itakura, Shoji and Oguchi, Shinji and Kasahara, Yoshiyuki and Kanenishi, Kenji and Kitadai, Yuzo and Kimura, Yoshitaka and Shimojo, Naoki and Nakahara, Kazushige and Hanai, Akiko and Hamada, Hiromichi and Mogami, Haruta and Morokuma, Seiichi and Sakurada, Kazuhiro and Konishi, Yukuo and Kawakami, Eiryo", title="Multilevel Factors and Indicators of Atypical Neurodevelopment During Early Infancy in Japan: Prospective, Longitudinal, Observational Study", journal="JMIR Pediatr Parent", year="2025", month="Apr", day="4", volume="8", pages="e58337", keywords="early developmental signs; neurodevelopmental screening; risk factors; prediction; early intervention; longitudinal study", abstract="Background: The early identification of developmental concerns requires understanding individual differences that may represent early signs of neurodevelopmental conditions. However, few studies have longitudinally examined how child and maternal factors interact to shape these early developmental characteristics. Objective: We aim to identify factors from the perinatal to infant periods associated with early developmental characteristics that may precede formal diagnoses and propose a method for evaluating individual differences in neurodevelopmental trajectories. Methods: A prospective longitudinal observational study of 147 mother-child pairs was conducted from gestation to 12 months post partum. Assessments included prenatal questionnaires and blood collection, cord blood at delivery, and postpartum questionnaires at 1, 6, and 12 months. The Modified Checklist for Autism in Toddlers (M-CHAT) was used to evaluate developmental characteristics that might indicate early signs of atypical neurodevelopment. Polychoric or polyserial correlation coefficients assessed relationships between M-CHAT scores and longitudinal variables. L2-regularized logistic regression and Shapley Additive Explanations predicted M-CHAT scores and determined feature contributions. Results: Twenty-one factors (4 prenatal, 3 at birth, and 14 postnatal) showed significant associations with M-CHAT scores (adjusted P values<.05). The predictive accuracy for M-CHAT scores demonstrated reasonable predictive accuracy (area under the receiver operating characteristic curve=0.79). Key predictors included infant sleep status after 6 months (nighttime sleep duration, bedtime, and difficulties falling asleep), maternal Kessler Psychological Distress Scale scores, and Mother-to-Infant Bonding Scale scores after late gestation. Conclusion: Maternal psychological distress, mother-infant bonding, and infant sleep patterns were identified as significant predictors of early developmental characteristics that may indicate emerging developmental concerns. This study advances our understanding of early developmental assessment by providing a novel approach to identifying and evaluating early indicators of atypical neurodevelopment. ", issn="2561-6722", doi="10.2196/58337", url="https://pediatrics.jmir.org/2025/1/e58337", url="https://doi.org/10.2196/58337" }