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Article type: Research Article
Authors: Mastroiacovo, Pierpaolo; ;
Affiliations: IPIMC, Italian Birth Defects Registry, Università Cattolica S. Cuore, Rome, Italy
Note: [] Correspondence to: Prof. P. Mastroiacovo, IPIMC, Università Cattolica S. Cuore, Largo Gemelli, 8, 00168 Roma, Italy.
Note: [] Paper presented during the 18th Meeting of the European Teratology Society, Edinburgh, 1990.
Abstract: Multimalformed infants (MMI) without a diagnosis of a specific syndrome have often been successfully used by alert clinicians to prompt studies which have led to the definition of new teratogens. However, usually they are not analyzed in any specific way in the routine monitoring by birth defects registries. In 1980 the International Clearinghouse for Birth Defects Monitoring Systems (ICBDMS) decided to try to develop new methodologies to use MMI in the larger and more systematic context of birth defects monitoring. Before starting the following issues had to be addressed: (a) definitions of “single defect” and of “multimalformed infant”, (b) transmission of information, and (c) coding. Only those registries able to give detailed descriptions of defects could take part. Between January 1983 and December 1987, out of more than 6.5 million births from 19 registries, 3,534 infants with at least three unrelated defects of any type were centrally registered and coded by a single person. Three main monitoring procedures were used: (a) statistical analysis of the frequency of 58 types of defects observed among the MMI, (b) computer aided search for “similar cases”, and (c) identification of “non random associations” and comparison with appropriate baseline material. This last procedure can also be used in cumulated material to study some well-known associations such as “VATER”. These monitoring activities did not identify any “alarm” situation, however, many simulations have shown the efficiency of the procedures, as well as the possibilities and limits of this collaborative monitoring activity.
Keywords: Epidemiology, Birth defects, Multimalformed infants, Clinical teratology, Methodology, Defects associations
DOI: 10.3233/JRS-1991-2504
Journal: International Journal of Risk and Safety in Medicine, vol. 2, no. 5, pp. 255-270, 1991
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