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Table 2 Association between maternal serum sex hormone binding globulin levels and odds of offspring developing autism

From: Sex-specific and sex-independent steroid-related biomarkers in early second trimester maternal serum associated with autism

Cohort

Mean

Range

SD

Crude modelsa

Adjusted modelsa,b

OR

95% CI

P Value

AOR

95% CI

P Value

Overall (N = 136)

316.42

57.05–1110.11

223.16

0.66

0.56–0.77

 < 0.001

0.65

0.55–0.78

 < 0.001

By sex

Males (n = 82)

289.54

66.42–1110.11

204.93

0.69

0.58–0.83

 < 0.001

0.7

0.57–0.85

 < 0.001

Females (n = 54)

357.23

57.05–1030.56

244.65

0.54

0.37–0.79

0.001

0.58

0.35–0.95

0.031

By gestational age categoryc

Term (n = 97)

274.95

57.05–1110.11

224.62

0.67

0.55–0.82

 < 0.001

0.67

0.53–0.85

 < 0.001

Preterm (n = 39)

419.56

77.69–813.79

184.81

0.63

0.45–0.86

0.004

0.5

0.30–0.85

0.01

  1. aOR and AOR are calculated for every 50 nmol/L increase in sex hormone binding globulin
  2. bAdjusted for Principal Component Factor 1 (gestational age, birthweight), Principal Component Factor 2 (maternal age, paternal age, maternal education duration, paternal education duration), pre-pregnancy body mass index (BMI), gestational weight gain, newborn sex. When stratified by sex, sex was removed as a covariate. When stratified by gestational age category, principal component factor 1 was replaced with birthweight
  3. cPreterm < 37 weeks gestation; term ≥ 37 weeks gestation