PERSONAL DE APOYO
GIMENEZ lucas Gabriel
artículos
Título:
Neural tube defects: Sex ratio changes after fortification with folic acid
Autor/es:
POLETTA, FERNANDO A.; RITTLER, MONICA; SALEME, CESAR; CAMPAÑA, HEBE; GILI, JUAN A.; PAWLUK, MARIELA S.; GIMENEZ, LUCAS G.; COSENTINO, VIVIANA R.; CASTILLA, EDUARDO E.; LÓPEZ-CAMELO, JORGE S.
Revista:
PLOS ONE
Editorial:
PUBLIC LIBRARY SCIENCE
Referencias:
Año: 2018 vol. 13
ISSN:
1932-6203
Resumen:
BackgroundHistorically, neural tube defects (NTDs) have predominated in female infants but the reasons remain unclear. In South America, the pre- folic acid fortification (FAF) rates of NTDs were around 18/10,000 births for females and 12/10,000 births for males, with an estimated sex ratio (male/female) of 0.67. During the post- FAF period, unpublished routine reports have indicated changes in the sex ratio for these defects while some descriptive reports are controversial. To date and to our knowledge, however, no studies specifically focusing on these changes to test this hypothesis directly have been undertaken. The aim of this study was to analyze changes in the sex ratio of infants with NTDs after FAF in South American countries.Materials and methodsWith a descriptive cross-sectional study design, 2,597 infants with isolated NTDs bornbetween 1990 and 2013 in 3 countries participating in the Latin American CollaborativeStudy of Congenital Malformations (ECLAMC) network were included: (Chile N = 521 andArgentina N = 1,619 [with FAF policies]; Venezuela N = 457 [without FAF policies; used ascontrol]; total births = 2,229,561). The differences-in-differences method and Poissonregressions were used to evaluate the sex ratio shift from female to male before vs. afterFAF, and to assess whether these differences were related to the fortification.Results and conclusionsIn Chile and Argentina the prevalence of NTDs, particularly anencephaly and cervico-thoracic spina bifida, showed a greater reduction rate in females than in males after FAF, resulting in a change of the sex ratio of infants with NTDs. Some mechanisms possibly involved in this differential reduction are proposed which might be useful to identify the pathogenesis of NTDs as a whole and specifically of those susceptible to the protective effect of folic acid.