Literature DB >> 11077007

Investigation of a cluster of children with Down's syndrome born to mothers who had attended a school in Dundalk, Ireland.

G Dean1, N C Nevin, M Mikkelsen, G Karadima, M B Petersen, M Kelly, J O'Sullivan.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: To investigate a reported cluster of Down's syndrome in offspring of former pupils of a girls' school in Ireland, to establish the prevalence of Down's syndrome among live births in the area around the school, and to review the literature on the possible causes of reported clusters of Down's syndrome.
METHODS: Questionnaire survey of obstetric and personal histories of women who had attended the girls' school at Dundalk, County Louth, Republic of Ireland, at some time during 1956-7, and also of women who had attended another, nearby, girls' school during the same period. Comparison of observed numbers of cases of Down's syndrome identified by these surveys with maternal age adjusted expected numbers for the reported live births. Laboratory tests were conducted to verify and characterise the cases of Down's syndrome constituting the cluster. Retrospective collection and collation of data on Down's syndrome occurring among live births, and the compilation of maternal age specific incidences, in County Louth and in Newry and Mourne District in neighbouring Northern Ireland, during 1961-80. These rates were compared with reference rates and rates for other areas of Ireland.
RESULTS: Six children with Down's syndrome were confirmed among 387 reported live births to women who had been pupils at the girls' school in Dundalk during 1956-7, compared with 0.69 expected (nominal p<10(-4)). Five of the affected births were to mothers under 30 years of age, against 0.15 expected (nominal p<10(-6)), although only four of these mothers were attending the school at any one time. The origin of the non-disjunction was found to be maternal first meiotic in four children, mitotic after fertilisation in another (with the youngest mother), and in the remaining one could not be determined. The marked excess of Down's syndrome in births to young mothers did not extend to offspring of former pupils of the other Dundalk girls' school surveyed, or to live births in County Louth generally or in adjacent Newry and Mourne District.
CONCLUSION: A striking, highly localised, excess of Down's syndrome in births to young mothers who had attended a girls' school in Dundalk during 1956-57 has been confirmed. However, not all of the mothers of the affected children attended the school concurrently and the origin of non-disjunction in one child was an error occurring after conception. Some exposure essentially confined to girls attending the school at this time is a possible, although unlikely, explanation, but a review of potential risk factors does not suggest what this could be. Previous suggestions that an influenza epidemic or contamination from the Windscale nuclear reactor fire might be implicated, both of which occurred in October 1957, can be effectively dismissed because three of the women with affected offspring had left the school by then and had moved away from Dundalk, and Down's syndrome in the child of another mother originated in an error after fertilisation. Owing to the retrospective nature of the investigation and the characteristics of the cases, chance is the most likely explanation for the cluster.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2000        PMID: 11077007      PMCID: PMC1739900          DOI: 10.1136/oem.57.12.793

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Occup Environ Med        ISSN: 1351-0711            Impact factor:   4.402


  59 in total

1.  Down's syndrome in the Lothian region of Scotland--1978 to 1989.

Authors:  C N Ramsay; P M Ellis; H Zealley
Journal:  Biomed Pharmacother       Date:  1991       Impact factor: 6.529

2.  Is there evidence of clustering in Down syndrome?

Authors:  J K Morris; E Alberman; D Mutton
Journal:  Int J Epidemiol       Date:  1998-06       Impact factor: 7.196

3.  Study of Down syndrome in 238,942 consecutive births.

Authors:  C Stoll; Y Alembik; B Dott; M P Roth
Journal:  Ann Genet       Date:  1998

Review 4.  A case-control study of congenital malformations and occupational exposure to low-level ionizing radiation.

Authors:  L E Sever; E S Gilbert; N A Hessol; J M McIntyre
Journal:  Am J Epidemiol       Date:  1988-02       Impact factor: 4.897

Review 5.  Epidemiology of Hodgkin's disease.

Authors:  S Grufferman; E Delzell
Journal:  Epidemiol Rev       Date:  1984       Impact factor: 6.222

6.  An unusual cluster of babies with Down's syndrome.

Authors: 
Journal:  Br Med J (Clin Res Ed)       Date:  1984-01-14

7.  Role of radiation in aetiology of Down's syndrome.

Authors:  A Brown
Journal:  Br Med J (Clin Res Ed)       Date:  1984-01-14

8.  An unusual cluster of babies with Down's syndrome born to former pupils of an Irish boarding school.

Authors:  P M Sheehan; I B Hillary
Journal:  Br Med J (Clin Res Ed)       Date:  1983-11-12

9.  The epidemiology of Down syndrome in four counties in Ireland 1981-1990.

Authors:  Z Johnson; D Lillis; V Delany; C Hayes; P Dack
Journal:  J Public Health Med       Date:  1996-03

10.  The natural history of cytogenetically abnormal fetuses detected at midtrimester amniocentesis which are not terminated electively: new data and estimates of the excess and relative risk of late fetal death associated with 47,+21 and some other abnormal karyotypes.

Authors:  E B Hook; B B Topol; P K Cross
Journal:  Am J Hum Genet       Date:  1989-12       Impact factor: 11.025

View more
  1 in total

1.  The Likelihood of Adverse Pregnancy Outcomes and Genetic Disease (Transgenerational Effects) from Exposure to Radioactive Fallout from the 1945 Trinity Atomic Bomb Test.

Authors:  John D Boice
Journal:  Health Phys       Date:  2020-10       Impact factor: 2.922

  1 in total

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.