| Literature DB >> 14693037 |
K S Joseph1, Alexander C Allen, Samawal Lutfi, Lynn Murphy-Kaulbeck, Michael J Vincer, Ellen Wood.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: It is generally accepted that the risk of cerebral palsy decreases with increasing gestational age of live born infants. However, recent studies have shown that cerebral palsy often has prenatal antecedents including congenital malformations, vascular insults and maternal infection. Cerebral palsy is therefore better viewed as occurring among fetuses, rather than among infants. We explored the epidemiologic implications of this change in perspective.Entities:
Year: 2003 PMID: 14693037 PMCID: PMC317470 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2393-3-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Pregnancy Childbirth ISSN: 1471-2393 Impact factor: 3.007
Figure 1Schematic depiction of a survival analysis model for cerebral palsy risk. Schematic depiction of a survival analysis model for cerebral palsy risk with post-menstrual age on the X-axis. Two arbitrary periods of risk are shown. In the first risk period, there is one case of cerebral palsy, 3 live births and 15 fetuses at risk, while in the second risk period there is one case of cerebral palsy, 6 live births and 8 fetuses at risk. Under the conventional formulation of gestational age-specific cerebral palsy, this implies a cerebral palsy rate of 1/3 in the first risk period and 1/6 in the second risk period. Under the fetuses-at-risk formulation, the rates of cerebral palsy are 1/15 and 1/8 in the first and second risk periods, respectively.
Figure 2Gestational age-specific cerebral palsy rates based on alternative formulations (live births vs fetuses-at-risk). Gestational age-specific rates of cerebral palsy based on live births within a gestational age category (primary Y-axis) and based on the number of fetuses at risk for cerebral palsy (secondary Y-axis), Shiga Prefecture, Japan [6] (top) and North-East England [7] (bottom).
Gestational age-specific rates of cerebral palsy based on live births within a gestational age category and based on the number of fetuses at risk for cerebral palsy, Shiga Prefecture, Japan [6], 1977 to 1991.
| Gestational age (weeks) | Live births | Cases of cerebral palsy | Rate of cerebral palsy† | Fetuses at risk for cerebral palsy | Rate of cerebral palsy‡ |
| <28 | 266 | 17 | 63.9 | 226,052 | 0.08 |
| 28–31 | 780 | 55 | 70.5 | 225,786 | 0.24 |
| 32–36 | 7,331 | 52 | 7.1 | 225,006 | 0.23 |
| ≥37 | 217,675 | 201 | 0.9 | 217,675 | 0.92 |
| Total¶ | 226,052 | 325 | 1.4 | 226,052 | 1.44 |
† rate per 1,000 live births, calculated using the number of live births within the gestational age category as the denominator. ‡ rate per 1,000 fetuses at risk, calculated using the number of fetuses at risk for cerebral palsy at the particular gestational age as the denominator. ¶ excluding live births with missing/unknown gestational age.
Figure 3Temporal trends in gestational age-specific rates of cerebral palsy based on the fetuses-at-risk approach. Temporal trends in gestational age-specific rates of cerebral palsy based on the fetuses-at-risk approach, Shiga Prefecture, Japan, 1977–81 versus 1987–91 [6] (top) and North-East England, 1970–74 versus 1990–94 [7] (bottom).