Background
Gastroschisis, a congenital anomaly of the abdomen, is associated with young maternal age and has increased in prevalence in many countries. Maternal illness and medication exposure are ...among environmental risk factors implicated in its aetiology.
Methods
A population‐based case‐malformed control study was conducted using data from 18 European congenital anomaly registries, with information on first trimester medication use, covering 8 million births 1995–2012. 1577 gastroschisis cases (of which 4% stillbirths, 11% terminations of pregnancy) were compared to 153 357 non‐chromosomal/monogenic controls. Literature review identified previous associations concerning maternal illness and medication exposure to be tested as signals. Logistic regression adjusted for maternal age group, registry, and time period was used to evaluate associations.
Results
Comparing gastroschisis to other congenital anomalies, the data supported signals concerning maternal depression (aOR 2.52, 95% CI 1.45, 4.39), antidepressant use (aOR 2.03, 95% CI 1.22, 3.38), postnatal depression/psychosis following a previous pregnancy (aOR 8.32, 95% CI 2.56, 27.01), sexually transmitted infections (aOR 2.85, 95% CI 1.13, 7.24), topical antivirals (aOR 5.31, 95% CI 1.63, 17.33), and continuation of oral contraceptives in early pregnancy (aOR 2.17, 95% CI 1.13, 4.18). Exploratory analyses suggested associations with a wider range of maternal infections and medications, including tonsillitis and the expectorant bromhexine.
Conclusions
While it is difficult to disentangle the effects of the medication and underlying indication, our results add to the evidence base on preventable risk factors for gastroschisis. These risk factors may contribute to the higher risk among young mothers, and geographical and temporal variation in prevalence.
Aims
To evaluate congenital anomaly (CA)‐medication exposure associations produced by the new EUROmediCAT signal detection system and determine which require further investigation.
Methods
Data from ...15 EUROCAT registries (1995–2011) with medication exposures at the chemical substance (5th level of Anatomic Therapeutic Chemical classification) and chemical subgroup (4th level) were analysed using a 50% false detection rate. After excluding antiepileptics, antidiabetics, antiasthmatics and SSRIs/psycholeptics already under investigation, 27 associations were evaluated. If evidence for a signal persisted after data validation, a literature review was conducted for prior evidence of human teratogenicity.
Results
Thirteen out of 27 CA‐medication exposure signals, based on 389 exposed cases, passed data validation. There was some prior evidence in the literature to support six signals (gastroschisis and levonorgestrel/ethinylestradiol (OR 4.10, 95% CI 1.70–8.53; congenital heart disease/pulmonary valve stenosis and nucleoside/tide reverse transcriptase inhibitors (OR 5.01, 95% CI 1.99–14.20/OR 28.20, 95% CI 4.63–122.24); complete absence of a limb and pregnen (4) derivatives (OR 6.60, 95% CI 1.70–22.93); hypospadias and pregnadien derivatives (OR 1.40, 95% CI 1.10–1.76); hypospadias and synthetic ovulation stimulants (OR 1.89, 95% CI 1.28–2.70). Antipropulsives produced a signal for syndactyly while the literature revealed a signal for hypospadias. There was no prior evidence to support the remaining six signals involving the ordinary salt combinations, propulsives, bulk‐forming laxatives, hydrazinophthalazine derivatives, gonadotropin releasing hormone analogues and selective serotonin agonists.
Conclusion
Signals which strengthened prior evidence should be prioritized for further investigation, and independent evidence sought to confirm the remaining signals. Some chance associations are expected and confounding by indication is possible.
Concern about apparent increases in the prevalence of hypospadias-a congenital male reproductive-tract abnormality-in the 1960s to 1980s and the possible connection to increasing exposures to ...endocrine-disrupting chemicals have underlined the importance of effective surveillance of hypospadias prevalence in the population. We report here the prevalence of hypospadias from 1980 to 1999 in 20 regions of Europe with EUROCAT (European Surveillance of Congenital Anomalies) population-based congenital anomaly registers, 14 of which implemented a guideline to exclude glanular hypospadias. We also report data from the England and Wales National Congenital Anomaly System (NCAS). Our results do not suggest a continuation of rising trends of hypospadias prevalence in Europe. However, a survey of the registers and a special validation study conducted for the years 1994-1996 in nine EUROCAT registers as well as NCAS identified a clear need for a change in the guidelines for registration of hypospadias. We recommend that all hypospadias be included in surveillance, but that information from surgeons be obtained to verify location of the meatus, and whether surgery was performed, in order to interpret trends. Investing resources in repeated special surveys may be more cost-effective than continuous population surveillance. We conclude that it is doubtful whether we have had the systems in place worldwide for the effective surveillance of hypospadias in relation to exposure to potential endocrine-disrupting chemicals.
Septo-optic nerve dysplasia is a rare congenital anomaly with optic nerve hypoplasia, pituitary hormone deficiencies and midline developmental defects of the brain. The clinical findings are visual ...impairment, hypopituitarism and developmental delays. The aim of this study was to report prevalence, associated anomalies, maternal age and other epidemiological factors from a large European population based network of congenital anomaly registries (EUROCAT). Data from 29 full member registries for the years 2005–2014 were included, covering 6.4 million births. There were 99 cases with a diagnosis of septo-optic dysplasia. The prevalence of septo-optic dysplasia in Europe was calculated to lie between 1.9 and 2.5 per 100,000 births after adjusting for potential under-reporting in some registries. The prevalence was highest in babies of mothers aged 20–24 years of age and was significantly higher in UK registries compared with other EUROCAT registries (P = 0.021 in the multilevel model) and the additional risk for younger mothers was significantly greater in the UK compared to the rest of Europe (P = 0.027). The majority of septo-optic dysplasia cases were classified as an isolated cerebral anomaly (N = 76, 77%). Forty percent of diagnoses occurred in fetuses with a prenatal diagnosis. The anomaly may not be visible at birth, which is reflected in that 57% of the postnatal diagnoses occurred over 1 month after birth.
This is the first population based study to describe the prevalence of septo-optic dysplasia in Europe. Septo-optic dysplasia shares epidemiological patterns with gastroschisis and this strengthens the hypothesis of vascular disruption being an aetiological factor for septo-optic dysplasia.
Aims
Information about medication safety in pregnancy is inadequate. We aimed to develop a signal detection methodology to routinely identify unusual associations between medications and congenital ...anomalies using data collected by 15 European congenital anomaly registries.
Methods
EUROmediCAT database data for 14 950 malformed foetuses/babies with first trimester medication exposures in 1995–2011 were analyzed. The odds of a specific medication exposure (coded according to chemical substance or subgroup) for a specific anomaly were compared with the odds of that exposure for all other anomalies for 40 385 medication anomaly combinations in the data. Simes multiple testing procedure with a 50% false discovery rate (FDR) identified associations least likely to be due to chance and those associations with more than two cases with the exposure and the anomaly were selected for further investigation. The methodology was evaluated by considering the detection of well‐known teratogens.
Results
The most common exposures were genitourinary system medications and sex hormones (35.2%), nervous system medications (28.0%) and anti‐infectives for systemic use (25.7%). Fifty‐two specific medication anomaly associations were identified. After discarding 10 overlapping and three protective associations, 39 associations were selected for further investigation. These associations included 16 which concerned well established teratogens, valproic acid (2) and maternal diabetes represented by use of insulin (14).
Conclusions
Medication exposure data in the EUROmediCAT central database can be analyzed systematically to determine a manageable set of associations for validation and then testing in independent datasets. Detection of teratogens depends on frequency of exposure, level of risk and teratogenic specificity.
Diamond-Blackfan anemia (DBA) is a prototypic ribosomopathy and remains the most common cause of congenital pure red cell aplasia (PRCA). In 2/3 of patients, ribosomal protein haploinsufficiency is ...disease-causing, while in remaining 1/3 the genetic etiology is unknown. Recently, deficiency of ADA2 (DADA2) due to biallelic CECR1 -mutations was reported in patients with systemic autoinflammatory disease presenting with early onset vasculopathy, strokes, antibody deficiency, and in some cases variable cytopenias. Based on the clinical findings in an ADA2-deficient patient with PRCA resembling DBA, we aimed to define the prevalence and clinical picture of DADA2 within DBA patient cohorts. Patients enrolled in the national observational DBA registry in Germany were evaluated for the presence of mutations in CECR1 gene; additional nonconsecutive patients from the French and Turkish registries within the European DBA (EuroDBA) consortium were part of this study. Functional studies included profiling of polysomes and pre-rRNAs in patient-derived EBV-cell lines, CECR1 RT-PCR, measurements of autophagy and apoptosis, and analysis of erythropoiesis in zebrafish embryos. Systematic mutational and copy number analysis had identified typical ribosomal haploinsufficiency in 169/242 patients (70%). Out of 73 remaining patients, full CECR1 -sequencing was accomplished in 68 cases, of which 4 (6%) carried biallelic CECR1 -mutations. Additional 3 patients with biallelic CECR1 -mutations and DBA phenotype were referred from Germany (the index PRCA case), France and Turkey. In contrast to typical autoinflammatory DADA2 (caused by missense biallelic CECR1 -mutations) all patients studied here had at least one CECR1 -allele affected by truncating/stop-gain/deletion mutation leading to mRNA degradation in patient cells. Low or missing ADA2 enzyme activity in plasma confirmed DADA2, while erythrocyte ADA (eADA) levels and MCV were normal. Transfusion-dependent hypoproliferative anemia developed at a median age of 5 weeks (birth-14 years), while hypogammaglobulinemia developed in all cases either initially or during disease course. Notably, a transient hematologic response to steroids was achieved in 5/7 patients, but no improvement was observed in 2 patients treated with TNF-inhibitor; all patients at one point became heavily transfusion-dependent. Systemic vasculitis or cerebral complications were not observed in our cohort. At the last follow-up, 6/7 patients were alive; 3 had successfully undergone hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT) with myeloablative conditioning and 1 patient had died due to septic shock. Next, we addressed the question if ribosome biogenesis is affected in ADA2-deficient patient cells. Using pre-rRNA maturation assays, polysome profiling and Western blots we established that ribosome biogenesis is normal in DADA2-related PRCA and there is no increase of TP53 stabilization over basal levels in patient LCLs. Analysis of CECR1 -morpholino zebrafish embryos revealed early anemia with lethal phenotype. Although there was no evidence for extrinsic (e.g. immune-mediated) pathomechanisms in our patients, it remains to be answered if CECR1 loss directly affects erythroid development. Finally, the association between elevated levels of eADA (=ADA1) specific to classical DBA and decreased ADA2 enzyme levels in DADA2-related PRCA remains obscure. In summary, DADA2 can phenotypically mimic DBA and thus extends the spectrum of congenital PRCA. Ribosome synthesis seems not to be affected by CECR1 mutations. DADA2 should be considered in patients with DBA-like phenotype but with normal eADA/MCV and hypogammaglobulinemia, allowing for early stratification aimed at HSCT in affected individuals.
Grosse:Addmedica: Membership on an entity's Board of Directors or advisory committees.
To further evaluate the controversial putative association between a Ser9Gly variant in the first exon of the dopamine D3 receptor gene (DRD3) and schizophrenia.
Swedish patients with schizophrenia ( ...n=156) and control subjects ( n=463) were assessed for the DRD3 Ser9Gly variant. Meta-analyses including previous and the present Swedish case-control results were performed.
No significant difference between the Swedish patients and controls were found, but there was an association between DRD3 Ser9Gly Ser/Ser and homozygous genotypes and response to anti-psychotic drugs. This finding was supported by an incomplete meta-analysis. In a meta-analysis of all case-control studies comprising 8761 subjects the association between DRD3 Ser9Gly homozygosity and schizophrenia ( =4.96, degree of freedom=1, p <0.05, odds ratio=1.10, 95% confidence interval=1.01-1.20) persisted. However, the previously proposed association between the Ser/Ser genotype and schizophrenia was not significant (chi2 =2.71, degree of freedom=1, p>0.05, odds ratio=1.08, 95% confidence interval=0.99-1.17).
Whereas the present Swedish case-control analysis did not yield any evidence for association with the diagnosis, the present meta-analysis suggests that the DRD3 gene confer susceptibility to schizophrenia. Reasons for the discrepancies between prior studies are discussed.