This study departed from a preconceived definition of VACTERL, including more than one of these six anomalies in the same infant:; V (vertebral anomalies), A (anal atresia), C (congenital heart disease), TE (tracheoesophageal fistula or esophageal atresia), R (reno‐urinary anomalies), and L (radial limb defect). Under this definition, 524 infants were ascertained by ECLAMC from almost 3,000,000 births examined from 1967 through 1990. Observed association rates among VACTERL components as well as between VACTERL and other defects were compared against randomly expected values obtained from 10,084 multiply malformed infants (casuistic method) from the same birth sample. Conclusions were: 1) Cardiac defects are not a part of VACTERL. 2) Single umbilical artery, ambiguous genitalia, abdominal wall defects, diaphragmatic hernia, and anomalies that are secondary to VACTERL components (intestinal and respiratory anomalies, and oligohydramnios sequence defects) are frequent enough to be considered an “extension” of VACTERL, and cardiac defects should be included in this category. 3) Neural tube defects are negatively associated with VACTERL which could not be explained by selection bias or any other operational artifact. High embryonic lethality or mutually exclusive pathogenetic mechanisms could be suitable explanations. 4) Results were not clear enough to determine whether VACTERL should be defined by at least two or three component defects. © 1996 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.
Reports of birth defects rates may focus on defects observed in the newborn period or include defects diagnosed at older ages. However, little information is available on the rates of additional anomalies detected after birth or on the ages at which such anomalies are diagnosed. The aims of this work were to describe the initial diagnoses of oral clefts, isolated or associated with other defects, in newborn infants ascertained in hospitals of the ECLAMC network, and diagnostic changes that occurred due to detection of additional defects during a one-year follow-up period. Seven hundred ten liveborn infants with cleft lip only (CLO), cleft lip with cleft palate (CLP), or cleft palate (CP) were ascertained between 2003 and 2005. Prevalence estimates of isolated and associated clefts, diagnoses in infants with associated clefts, and the percentage of isolated clefts that were reclassified as associated were established. Birth prevalence estimates (per 1,000) were as follows: Total: 1.7; CLP: 0.94 (ASO=23.5%); CP: 0.46 (ASO=42.3%); CLO: 0.28 (ASO=7.6%). Initial diagnoses in infants with associated clefts included 38 infants with chromosomal abnormalities, 33 with non-chromosomal syndromes, 16 with malformation sequences, and 98 with multiple anomalies of unknown etiology. Seven percent of newborns initially classified as isolated were later reclassified as associated. Ten infants without associated defects or clinically suspected syndromes were diagnosed as syndromic only through laboratory findings or family history, illustrating the difference between the terms associated vs. isolated, which refers to presence or absence of associated anomalies, and syndromic vs. non-syndromic, which refers to etiology.
The results indicate etiological differences between high and low SB, a stronger relationship between multigravidity and female sex of the offspring than between multigravidity and a specific congenital anomaly, and a possible involvement of dominant mutations for CL(P), as suggested by the association with increased paternal age.
This study departed from a preconceived definition of VACTERL, including more than one of these six anomalies in the same infant: V (vertebral anomalies), A (anal atresia), C (congenital heart disease), TE (tracheoesophageal fistula or esophageal atresia), R (reno-urinary anomalies), and L (radial limb defect). Under this definition, 524 infants were ascertained by ECLAMC from almost 3,000,000 births examined from 1967 through 1990. Observed association rates among VACTERL components as well as between VACTERL and other defects were compared against randomly expected values obtained from 10,084 multiply malformed infants (casuistic method) from the same birth sample. Conclusions were: 1) Cardiac defects are not a part of VACTERL. 2) Single umbilical artery, ambiguous genitalia, abdominal wall defects, diaphragmatic hernia, and anomalies that are secondary to VACTERL components (intestinal and respiratory anomalies, and oligohydramnios sequence defects) are frequent enough to be considered an "extension" of VACTERL, and cardiac defects should be included in this category. 3) Neural tube defects are negatively associated with VACTERL which could not be explained by selection bias or any other operational artifact. High embryonic lethality or mutually exclusive pathogenetic mechanisms could be suitable explanations. 4) Results were not clear enough to determine whether VACTERL should be defined by at least two or three component defects.
Parental consanguinity, as a recognized risk factor for congenital anomalies, has mainly been studied with a focus on the types of parental relationships and their effects on genetic syndromes or birth defects in general. The present work analyzed the association between parental consanguinity and congenital anomalies, split, when possible, into clinical subtypes, in an attempt to obtain some insight into their recognized etiological heterogeneity. The material consisted of 34,102 newborn infants, affected by one of 47 selected congenital anomaly types, ascertained by the Latin-American Collaborative Study of Congenital Malformations (ECLAMC) during the period from 1967 to 1997. The consanguinity rate for each congenital anomaly type was compared with that of the population under study (0.96%), and the potentially confounding effect of six selected variables was controlled through a conditional logistic regression analysis for those congenital anomalies significantly associated with consanguinity. Pre-occurrence rates for the same congenital anomaly in sibships of consanguineous and non-consanguineous cases were compared. A significant association with parental consanguinity was observed for three congenital anomaly types: hydrocephalus, postaxial hand polydactyly, and bilateral cleft lip +/- cleft palate, while three additional anomalies, namely, cephalocele, microcephaly, and hand + foot postaxial polydactyly, showed a positive association, but statistical significance disappeared after adjustment for confounders, probably owing to sample size reduction. The association between consanguinity and Down syndrome was mainly due to the confounding effect of maternal age, while for hydrops fetalis and 2-3 toe syndactyly, the observed positive association could not be tested for confounders due to sample size reduction.
A sample of 53,552 nonmalformed liveborn infants was ascertained by the Latin-American Collaborative Study of Congenital Malformations between 1967 and 1996. The mean consanguinity rate was 0.96%, with significantly higher values in Brazil and Venezuela, and lower in Argentina. Low paternal education and occupation levels were positively associated with consanguinity. First-cousin matings represented almost half of all consanguineous couples. The consanguinity was mainly of more closely related types in Brazil, while in Venezuela more remote types predominated. This could reflect differences in migration patterns and rates between these two countries.
The strong association between all types of clefts and anencephaly seems to be attributable to cases with disruptions; the association between CP and club feet seems to be attributable to conditions with fetal akinesia. Some negative associations may depend on methodologic factors, while others, such as clefts with VATER components or clefts with spina bifida, may depend on biological factors. The different patterns of defects associated with CL and CLP, indicating different underlying mechanisms, suggest that CL and CLP reflect more than just variable degrees of severity, and that distinct pathways might be involved.
Based on these findings, on the lack of evidence in the literature demonstrating full-thickness abdominal wall separating the defect from the umbilical cord, and on a critical review of the proposed mechanisms favoring the hypothesis of a defect separate from the umbilical ring, we propose that GS represents a failure in the normal attachment between umbilical cord and umbilical ring. The consistent clinical course of fetuses with prenatal demise suggests careful targeted monitoring during late gestation.
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