| Literature DB >> 23873812 |
Jordana N Peake1, Andrew J Copp, Jill Shawe.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: It is widely accepted that periconceptional supplementation with folic acid can prevent a significant proportion of neural tube defects (NTDs). The present study evaluated how folic acid knowledge and periconceptional use for NTD prevention varies by ethnicity in the United Kingdom (U.K.).Entities:
Keywords: ethnicity; folic acid; neural tube defects; periconception; preconception; prevention
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23873812 PMCID: PMC3798113 DOI: 10.1002/bdra.23154
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Birth Defects Res A Clin Mol Teratol ISSN: 1542-0752
Figure 1Flow diagram detailing process of selection of studies for inclusion in systematic review and meta-analysis. NTD, neural tube defect; UK, U.K.
Study Summaries
| Study | Study setting | Study population | Study design | Study period | Knowledge of folic acid benefits assessed? | Periconceptional folic acid use assessed? | Other Information |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2 GP practices (presumed Bristol due to author’s location but unspecified) | 105 women from inner GP practice and 103 women from suburban GP practice; aged 15–40 | Self-completion questionnaire | Inner city GP: Aug 1995 Suburban GP: Dec 1995 | Yes | No | Women included whether or not they were attending antenatal appointments. | |
| Not stated how ethnicity was defined. | |||||||
| GP antenatal clinics in Nottingham | 13 pregnant British Pakistani women attending consecutive antenatal clinics | In-depth interview (in English, Urdu or Punjabi) | Not stated | Yes | Yes | Ethnicity was ascertained using names recorded on antenatal lists. | |
| Antenatal clinics in Tower Hamlets, London | 249 women (120 Bangladeshi and 100 white) attending for first antenatal appointment | Verbally administered questionnaire before appointment | October 1997-July 1998 | Yes | Only pre-conceptional folic acid use | Self-described ethnic group. | |
| Homerton Hospital antenatal clinic or 2 community clinics in Hackney, East London | 402 pregnant women attending for first antenatal appointment | Researcher-led questionnaire | June 2002-May 2004 | No | Yes. Before 6 weeks gestation was of particular interest. | Self-described ethnic group. | |
| Non-English speakers and those taking multi-vitamins (excluding folic acid and iron) excluded. | |||||||
| Three South Wales Hospitals’ antenatal clinics | 386 pregnant women | Anonymous self-completion questionnaire | May 2010 | Results were not broken down by ethnicity | Yes | Self-described ethnic group |
Breakdown by Ethnicity of the Number and Proportion of Participants in Each Study
| No. of cases (% of total in each study) | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ethnicity | |||||
| White or Caucasian | White: 166 (80) | White: 100 (40) | Caucasian: 155 (39) | White: 307 (80) | |
| Afro-Caribbean | 15 (7) | ||||
| Asian | 18 (9) | 42 (10) | 32 (8) | ||
| Pakistani | 13 (100) | ||||
| Bangladeshi | 120 (48) | ||||
| African | 111 (28) | ||||
| West Indian | 66 (16) | ||||
| Black | 15 (4) | ||||
| Chinese | 2 (1) | ||||
| Mixed race | 5 (1) | ||||
| Other/Unknown | 9 (4) | 29 (12) | 28 (7) | 25 (6) | |
Figure 2Meta-analysis of preconceptional folic acid use in Caucasians compared with non-Caucasians. The odds ratio for each individual study is given as well as an overall odds ratio across the three studies. Weighting of each study was determined according to the random effects model used for the meta-analysis.