Search for ethnic,geographic, and other factors in the epidemiology of Down syndrome in South America: Analysis of data from the ECLAMC project, 1967–1997 |
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Authors: | Eduardo E. Castilla Maria da Graça Dutra Ernest B. Hook |
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Affiliation: | 1. Estudio Colaborativo Latinoamericano de Malformaciones Congenitas (ECLAMC), WHO Collaborating Centre for the Prevention of Birth Defects, Instituto Oswaldo Cruz, Fiocruz, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil;2. Centro de Educación Médica e Investigaciones Clínicas (CEMIC), Buenos Aires, Argentina;3. School of Public Health, University of California, Berkeley, California;4. Department of Pediatrics, School of Medicine, University of California, San Francisco, California |
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Abstract: | We have analyzed data on 3,157 cases of Down syndrome (DS) from nine South American countries in consecutive series of hospital live births over a 30‐year period, with particular emphasis on possible ethnic or geographic variations in maternal age‐adjusted incidence. The data constitute the largest series of DS cases assembled to date from an area lacking advanced health care systems. Absolute incidence rates were estimated from total hospital live births; relative rates were estimated from matched case‐control data using conditional logistic regression. Maternal age‐adjusted rates were closely similar to those reported elsewhere, and showed little or no dependency on other factors investigated, including paternal age, birth order, ancestral origin, country of birth, maternal educational level, maternal ABO and Rhesus blood groups, interval to and outcome of mother's previous pregnancy, and parental consanguinity. The absence of an effect of high birth order was particularly notable because of the relatively large number of grand multipara resulting from high fertility in this population. The study adds to a body of evidence suggesting that maternal age‐adjusted DS rates vary little across human populations, and are therefore unlikely to be greatly influenced by genetic or environmental factors that differ between them. An unusual finding was of a markedly lower sex ratio (98 males per 100 females) than has been reported in other DS samples. © 2001 Wiley‐Liss, Inc. |
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Keywords: | Down syndrome South America maternal age incidence rates sex ratio |
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