Long-term effects following prenatal cocaine exposure: A systematic review
GIST
by Rocco Miazzi, Clara Cestonaro, Francesco Attanasio, Guido Travaini, Cristina Scarpazza, Claudio Terranova Cocaine use represents a global public-health concern, and children’s exposure to this substance is receiving growing attention. Despite the importance of this phenomenon, efforts to isolate cocaine-specific long-term effects are affected by the limited availability of human cohorts followed into adulthood and by the influence of environmental factors and co-exposures.
Addressing ongoing debates in the literature, this systematic review synthesizes human evidence on long-term outcomes following prenatal cocaine exposure (PCE), from infancy to early adulthood. A comprehensive search of PubMed and Scopus from inception to August 2025 identified 26 eligible studies.
Results suggest that across maturational stages, PCE is consistently associated with early developmental effects (including smaller head circumference and motor delays), deficits in visuospatial, language and executive functions, focal neuroimaging alterations (white-matter microstructure and task-related functional recruitment), growth deficits, and elevated externalizing behaviours. However, evidence is characterised by heterogeneity in exposure assessment, frequent prenatal polysubstance exposure, socioeconomic confounding, caregiving instability and small neuroimaging samples.
Clinical Editorial
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PLOS ONE (Medicine) published a clinical update in Research Highlights on 26 Jun 2026.
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