1. Pregnancy outcomes of mothers with an alcohol-related diagnosis: a population-based cohort study for the period 1983-2007.
- Author
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Srikartika VM and O'Leary CM
- Subjects
- Adult, Case-Control Studies, Cohort Studies, Female, Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorders ethnology, Humans, Infant, Newborn, Poisson Distribution, Pregnancy, Pregnancy Outcome, Regression Analysis, Risk Assessment, Risk Factors, Western Australia epidemiology, Alcohol-Related Disorders ethnology, Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorders etiology, Pregnancy Complications ethnology
- Abstract
Objective: To examine fetal outcomes of mothers with an alcohol-related diagnosis., Design: Population-based cohort., Setting: Western Australia (WA)., Population: Births on the WA Midwives Notification System (1983-2007)., Methods: Infants of mothers with an alcohol-related diagnosis [International Classification of Disease (ICD), 9th/10th revisions] recorded on WA health data sets (non-Aboriginal n = 13 807; Aboriginal n = 9766) were identified through the WA data linkage system. A comparison cohort of infants born to mothers without an alcohol diagnosis was frequency matched on maternal age, year of birth of the offspring, and Aboriginal status (non-Aboriginal n = 40 148; Aboriginal n = 20 643)., Main Outcome Measures: Poisson regression-generated adjusted relative risk (aRR) and 95% confidence intervals (95% CIs) for small for gestational age (SGA), preterm birth, and low-Apgar score, calculated separately for non-Aboriginal and Aboriginal infants of mothers with an alcohol diagnosis recorded during pregnancy and any alcohol diagnosis. Population-attributable fractions were calculated., Results: The aRR for non-Aboriginal infants when a maternal alcohol diagnosis was recorded during pregnancy ranged from 1.79 (95% CI 1.42-2.16) for SGA to 2.57 (95% CI 1.69-4.27) for preterm birth <32 weeks of gestation, and for Aboriginal infants ranged from 2.69 (95% CI 2.28-3.16) to 1.99 (95% CI 1.40-2.84), respectively. The highest population-attributable fractions were for any alcohol diagnosis and for Aboriginal infants. For Aboriginal births, approximately 9% (95% CI 4.74-12.97) and 10.1% (95% CI 5.50-14.49) of moderate and very preterm births, respectively, and 24.4% (95% CI 13.5-21.2%) of SGAs were attributable to having a mother with any alcohol-related diagnosis., Conclusions: Mothers with an alcohol diagnosis are at increased risk of poor pregnancy outcomes. The public health impact of maternal alcohol-use disorders on fetal outcomes is significant., (© 2014 Royal College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists.)
- Published
- 2015
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