Lantos Paul M, Maradiaga-Panayotti Gabriela, Barber Xavier, Raynor Eileen, Tucci Debara, Hoffman Kate, Permar Sallie R, Jackson Pearce, Hughes Brenna L, Kind Amy, Swamy Geeta K
Department of Pediatrics, Duke University, Durham, North Carolina, USA.
Department of Medicine, Duke University, Durham, North Carolina, USA.
Otolaryngol Head Neck Surg. 2018 Dec;159(6):1051-1057. doi: 10.1177/0194599818803305. Epub 2018 Oct 9.
Approximately 1 to 2 of every 1000 American newborns has hearing loss identified by newborn screening. This study was designed to determine if infant hearing loss is more common in socioeconomically disadvantaged communities.
In this retrospective study, we analyzed electronic medical record data using geostatistical models.
Infants were residents of Durham County, North Carolina, born in 2 hospitals of the Duke University Health System. This county includes the city of Durham and surrounding suburban and rural communities.
Subjects were hearing-screened newborns, born between 2005 and 2016, whose residential address was in Durham County, North Carolina. This was a retrospective study using medical record data. We used Bayesian regression models with smoothing of coordinate date to identify both spatial and nonspatial predictors of infant hearing loss.
We identified 19,348 infants from Durham County, of whom 675 had failed initial hearing screening and 191 had hearing loss confirmed on follow-up. Hearing loss was significantly associated with minority race (odds ratio [OR], 2.45; 95% confidence interval, 1.97-3.06), as well as lower gestational age and maternal sexually transmitted infections. We identified significant geographic heterogeneity, with a higher probability of hearing loss in poorer urban neighborhoods (local OR range, 0.59-1.39). Neighborhood disadvantage was a significant predictor of hearing loss, as was high local seroprevalence of cytomegalovirus (CMV) among pregnant women.
Urban, low-income neighborhoods have a high prevalence of infant hearing loss compared with more affluent surrounding communities, particularly among minorities. This distribution may be attributable to congenital CMV infection.
每1000名美国新生儿中约有1至2名通过新生儿听力筛查被确诊为听力损失。本研究旨在确定婴儿听力损失在社会经济条件不利的社区中是否更为常见。
在这项回顾性研究中,我们使用地理统计模型分析电子病历数据。
婴儿为北卡罗来纳州达勒姆县居民,在杜克大学健康系统的2家医院出生。该县包括达勒姆市以及周边的郊区和农村社区。
研究对象为2005年至2016年间在北卡罗来纳州达勒姆县出生且居住地址在此的接受听力筛查的新生儿。这是一项利用病历数据的回顾性研究。我们使用带有坐标数据平滑处理的贝叶斯回归模型来确定婴儿听力损失的空间和非空间预测因素。
我们从达勒姆县确定了19348名婴儿,其中675名初次听力筛查未通过,191名在后续检查中被确诊为听力损失。听力损失与少数族裔显著相关(优势比[OR]为2.45;95%置信区间为1.97 - 3.06),同时与较低的孕周和母亲性传播感染也有关。我们发现了显著的地理异质性,在较贫困的城市社区听力损失的可能性更高(局部OR范围为0.59 - 1.39)。社区劣势是听力损失的一个重要预测因素,孕妇中巨细胞病毒(CMV)的高局部血清阳性率也是如此。
与周边更富裕的社区相比,城市低收入社区婴儿听力损失的患病率较高,尤其是在少数族裔中。这种分布可能归因于先天性CMV感染。