Hoyt Adrienne T, Canfield Mark A, Shaw Gary M, Waller Dorothy K, Polen Kara N D, Ramadhani Tunu, Anderka Marlene T, Scheuerle Angela E
Birth Defects Epidemiology and Surveillance Branch, Texas Department of State Health Services, Austin, Texas.
Birth Defects Res A Clin Mol Teratol. 2014 Nov;100(11):852-62. doi: 10.1002/bdra.23282. Epub 2014 Jul 30.
It has been observed in several studies that infants with anotia/microtia are more common among Hispanics compared with other racial/ethnic groups. We examined the association between selected Hispanic ethnicity and acculturation factors and anotia/microtia in the National Birth Defects Prevention Study.
We examined data from mothers of 351 infants with isolated anotia/microtia and 8435 unaffected infants from the National Birth Defects Prevention Study with an expected delivery date from 1997 to 2007. Sociodemographic, maternal, and acculturation factors (e.g., age, maternal education, household income, body mass index, gestational diabetes, folic acid, smoking, alcohol intake, study center, parental birthplace, and years lived in the United States, maternal language) were assessed as overall risk factors and also as risk factors among subgroups of Hispanics (United States- and foreign-born) versus non-Hispanic whites.
Compared with non-Hispanic whites, both United States- and foreign-born Hispanic mothers demonstrated substantially higher odds of delivering infants with anotia/microtia across nearly all strata of sociodemographic and other maternal factors (adjusted odds ratios range: 2.1-11.9). The odds of anotia/microtia was particularly elevated among Hispanic mothers who emigrated from Mexico after age five (adjusted odds ratios = 4.88; 95% confidence interval = 2.93-8.11) or who conducted the interview in Spanish (adjusted odds ratios = 4.97; 95% confidence interval = 3.00-8.24).
We observed that certain sociodemographic and acculturation factors are associated with higher risks of anotia/microtia among offspring of Hispanic mothers.
多项研究观察到,与其他种族/族裔群体相比,西班牙裔婴儿中无耳/小耳畸形更为常见。我们在国家出生缺陷预防研究中研究了特定西班牙裔种族和文化适应因素与无耳/小耳畸形之间的关联。
我们研究了国家出生缺陷预防研究中351例患有孤立性无耳/小耳畸形婴儿的母亲以及8435例未受影响婴儿的母亲的数据,预期分娩日期为1997年至2007年。社会人口统计学、母亲和文化适应因素(如年龄、母亲教育程度、家庭收入、体重指数、妊娠期糖尿病、叶酸、吸烟、饮酒、研究中心、父母出生地、在美国居住的年数、母亲语言)被评估为总体风险因素,也作为西班牙裔亚组(在美国出生和外国出生)与非西班牙裔白人之间的风险因素。
与非西班牙裔白人相比,在美国出生和外国出生的西班牙裔母亲在几乎所有社会人口统计学和其他母亲因素分层中分娩无耳/小耳畸形婴儿的几率都显著更高(调整后的优势比范围:2.1 - 11.9)。五岁后从墨西哥移民的西班牙裔母亲(调整后的优势比 = 4.88;95%置信区间 = 2.93 - 8.11)或用西班牙语进行访谈的西班牙裔母亲(调整后的优势比 = 4.97;95%置信区间 = 3.00 - 8.24)中无耳/小耳畸形的几率尤其升高。
我们观察到某些社会人口统计学和文化适应因素与西班牙裔母亲后代中无耳/小耳畸形的较高风险相关。