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About
Congenital malformations rate is about 3% in France. There are already 5 registries in France, covering about 16% of French births: Paris Registry, (about 38 000 births /year), Alsace Registry, (about 23 000 births/year), Rhône-Alpes Registry, (about 56 000 births/year), Auvergne Registry, (about 14 000 births/year), and la Réunion Registry. The aim of malformation registries is to carry out epidemiologic surveillance of congenital anomalies. The objectives are mainly to provide essential epidemiologic information on congenital anomalies, to facilitate the early warning of teratogenic exposures, to act as an information and resource centre regarding clusters, to provide data for research related to the causes and prevention of congenital anomalies.
A previous study was carried out in Brittany in 2008-2009, by the perinatal network of Ille et Vilaine, in collaboration with two research teams (Inserm U1085 and Inserm U 936), to record all cases of 4 types of congenital anomalies: congenital heart disease, spina bifida, diaphragmatic hernia and hypospadia. The results showed prevalence rates similar to those observed by Eurocat for spina bifida and diaphragmatic hernia, but a higher prevalence regarding congenital heart diseases and hypospadia. In this study the investigators could not determine whether this was due to a real higher frequency or to a particular exhaustiveness in the recording methodology.
There are hypothesis about the role of intrauterine exposure to pesticides, known as endocrine disruptors, and the risk of congenital genital anomalies. Brittany is an intensive agricultural area, and it is thus worth studying the impact of pesticides exposure on congenital anomalies.
There are also hypothesis on the impact of occupational exposure to solvents on congenital anomalies (Garlantezec 2009), and on the role of alcohol exposure (which concerns about 8% pregnant women in France) on oro-facial clefts and congenital heart diseases.
The Registry of congenital anomalies in Brittany was set up in 2010. The main aim is to study the impact of intra-uterine exposure to solvents, pesticides and alcohol on the risk of congenital malformations diagnosed at births, by measuring the exposure both directly in meconium, and indirectly by questionnaires.
Secondary objectives are to study other risk factors such as medicine intake, pregnancy illness...
Full description
Population based case-control study:
2 controls per case will be included, corresponding to the first 2 births without congenital anomalies, with same sex and same birth place, following the case.
INVESTIGATION METHODOLOGY :
All maternity in Brittany were proposed to participate. In each maternity, the referent practitioner informs the parents and includes the cases.
For each case and control, meconium samples and a mother's lock are collected by nurses or midwives, medical data are collected from medical reports by the registry investigator, and a self-questionnaire is filled by the mother.
Meconium samples are immediately stored in a freezer (-20°C), secondarily transported to a biological storage centre at the university hospital and then dispatched to specialised laboratories for toxicological analyses: INERIS (for solvents and pesticides) and Toxicology Unit, University hospital Rennes (for Alcohol).
For dead fetuses (stillbirths or termination of pregnancy), meconium will be collected by the pathologist in charge of the autopsy, after parents' consent.
Evaluation of exposure:
Particular cases: mild congenital heart defects, genital anomalies and hip dislocation diagnosed later after birth (after the period oh meconium and before the age of one): these cases will be spotted through the Registry, there won't be any biological sample for them, but mothers will be contacted by main investigator and medical data and mother questionnaires will be collected. There won't be any control included for those cases included after birth.
Associations between exposure risk factors (alcohol, solvents and pesticides) and the risk of congenital malformations will be estimated by a multivariate analysis.
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Inclusion criteria
All live births, fetal deaths with gestational age (GA) ≥22 weeks and terminations of pregnancy for medical reasons (IMG) from 20 weeks of amenorrhea (SA) included.
Non inclusion criteria :
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1,657 participants in 2 patient groups
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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