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Folic Acid In Utero Cuts Heart Defects
Family Practice News ^ | 15 December 2008 | BRUCE JANCIN

Posted on 01/24/2009 10:34:26 AM PST by neverdem

NEW ORLEANS — Periconceptual folic acid supplementation appears to reduce by close to 20% the overall risk of congenital heart defects, a Dutch case-control study has shown.

This finding has important public health implications in light of the enormous number of babies born with congenital heart defects each year worldwide, Dr. Ingrid van Beynum said at the annual scientific sessions of the American Heart Association.

Indeed, congenital heart defects are the most common form of birth defects. In the United States alone, 40,000 affected babies are born each year. Periconceptual folic acid supplementation at 400 mcg/day is already recommended for the prevention of neural tube defects, but surveys indicate many women don't follow this guidance. The added benefit of a reduced risk of congenital heart defects might be more persuasive, she said

Consumption of folic acid-fortified foods typically gets a mother only one-quarter of the way to the recommended periconceptual 400 mcg/day, noted Dr. van Beynum of Radboud University Nijmegen (the Netherlands) Medical Centre.

She presented an analysis of a decade's worth of data from EUROCAT (European Surveillance of Congenital Anomalies), a comprehensive birth defects registry covering three Northern Dutch provinces. In 1995, the year before the study period began, the Dutch government launched a major media campaign encouraging women to take 400 mcg/day folic acid starting 4 weeks before conception and to continue the supplements until 8 weeks afterward.

The cases comprised 611 mothers who gave birth to babies with isolated or complex heart defects unrelated to either a genetic abnormality or a syndrome; 2,401 mothers who gave birth to infants with noncardiac congenital malformations and a known chromosomal defect served as controls. Diabetic mothers, those who had used folate antagonists, and mothers of babies with neural tube defects, limb reduction, hypospadias, or oral cleft palate were excluded from both groups.

Of the Dutch mothers included in the study, 62% were regular users of folic acid supplements periconceptually; 38% were not. The incidence of any congenital heart defect was 28.5% in nonusers compared with 23.2% in users, for a highly significant 18.5% relative risk reduction in the women who took folic acid supplements.

After investigators adjusted in a multivariate model for potential confounders including the baby's year of birth, maternal age, smoking and alcohol consumption during pregnancy, and maternal body mass index and education level, the estimated relative risk reduction associated with maternal periconceptual folic acid supplements remained at 18%, since the prevalence of potential confounders in cases and controls was similar.

There was a particularly impressive 38% reduction in the adjusted risk of isolated septal heart defects in the folic acid group. Ventricular septal defects—the most common type of congenital heart defects—were reduced by 31%, while isolated atrial septal defects were decreased by 46%. There were no significant differences between folic acid supplement users and nonusers in the incidence of right- or left-sided outflow obstruction or complex heart defects.

However, the 23% relative reduction in the risk of conotruncal heart defects among folic acid users might well have achieved statistical significance with a larger patient sample size, according to Dr. van Beynum.

Although a randomized placebo-controlled trial is acknowledged to be the highest form of scientific evidence, a definitive randomized trial of periconceptual folic acid supplementation for the prevention of congenital heart defects would be ethically impossible because of the treatment's established effectiveness in preventing neural tube defects. Data from EUROCAT and other comprehensive registries will have to do, she noted.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; News/Current Events; Testing
KEYWORDS: folate; folicacid; health; medicine

1 posted on 01/24/2009 10:34:31 AM PST by neverdem
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To: neverdem
No surprise here. My wife and I have known of the benefits of folic acid since before our first arrived.

Our teacher of the Bradley Method was very literate on the subject of pre- and perinatal neutrition and espoused the many benefits of folic acid in the diet.

We call our two very healthy and intelligent (and might I add, perfect) children, "Broccoli Babies".

2 posted on 01/24/2009 11:29:37 AM PST by Bloody Sam Roberts (All the oil's in Texas...but all the dipsticks are in Washington, DC.)
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To: neverdem

That’s great - Congenital Heart Defects AND Neural Tube Defects.

Is there a standard yet to recommend all women of childbearing age to supplement with Folic Acid?


3 posted on 01/24/2009 5:58:44 PM PST by Born Conservative (Bohicaville: http://bohicaville.wordpress.com/)
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To: Born Conservative
Let's insist that *ALL* crack and cigarettes be fortified with folates.

After all, it's for the children! /sarc>

Cheers!

4 posted on 01/24/2009 7:01:39 PM PST by grey_whiskers (The opinions are solely those of the author and are subject to change without notice.)
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To: Born Conservative
Is there a standard yet to recommend all women of childbearing age to supplement with Folic Acid?

I don't know, but the generic multivitamin that I take has 400 mcg of folic acid. I would think an ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure here, IMHO.

5 posted on 01/24/2009 7:05:34 PM PST by neverdem (Xin loi minh oi)
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