| Literature DB >> 24708684 |
Shannon Lange, Kevin Shield, Gideon Koren, Jürgen Rehm, Svetlana Popova1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Maternal self-reports, used for the detection of prenatal alcohol exposure (PAE), may lack validity, necessitating the use of an objective biomarker. The detection of fatty acid ethyl esters (products of non-oxidative ethanol metabolism) in meconium has been established as a novel biomarker of PAE. The purpose of the current study was to compare the prevalence of PAE as reported via maternal self-reports with the results of meconium testing, and to quantify the disparity between these two methods.Entities:
Mesh:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 24708684 PMCID: PMC3992148 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2393-14-127
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Pregnancy Childbirth ISSN: 1471-2393 Impact factor: 3.007
Figure 1Flow diagram depicting the search strategy employed.
Studies that reported the prevalence of prenatal alcohol exposure using maternal self-reports and meconium testing
| | | | | | | | | | | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Canada, Ontario | Gareri et al. [ | 2004-05 | 682 | Regional birthing hospitals | n/a | Questionnaire | n/a | 2 n▪mol/g | 5 | 0.5% | 17 | 2.5% | 5 times |
| Canada, Ontario | Goh et al. [ | 2006-07 | 50 | High-risk obstetric unit | n/a | Medical record | n/a | 2 n▪mol/g | 1 | 2.0% | 15 | 30.0% | 15 times |
| Germany, Erlangen | Bakdash et al. [ | n/a | 602 | Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology | n/a | Questionnaire, with CAGE [ | n/a | 500 n▪g/g (~2 n▪mol/g) | 1 | 0.2% | 43 | 7.1% | 43 times |
| Italy, Emilia | Pichini et al. [ | n/a | 96 | Neonatal Intensive Care Unit | 28.4 | Questionnaire | n/a | 2 n▪mol/g | 3 | 3.1% | 8 | 8.3% | 2.7 times |
| Italy | Pichini et al. [ | n/a | 607 | Neonatal wards of public hospitals | 31 | Questionnaire, with AUDIT [ | All three trimesters | 2 n▪mol/g | 65c | 10.7% | 48 | 7.9% | 0.7 times |
| Spain, Barcelona | Garcia-Algar et al. [ | n/a | 353 | Hospital (low SES) | 29 | n/a | n/a | 2 n▪mol/g | 48 | 13.6% | 159 | 45.0% | 3.3 times |
| Spain, Barcelona | Manich et al. [ | n/a | 62 | Neonatal hospital | n/a | Questionnaire | n/a | 2 n▪mol/g | 0 | 0% | 10 | 16.1% | 16.1 times |
| Spain, Barcelona | Pichini et al. [ | n/a | 81 | Neonatal Intensive Care Unit | 28.3 | Questionnaire | n/a | 2 n▪mol/g | 4 | 4.9% | 34 | 42.0% | 8.5 times |
| Uruguay, Montevideo | Hutson et al. [ | 2005 | 900 | Public Hospitals | 25.4 | Questionnaire, with CAGE [ | n/a | 2 n▪mol/g | 331 | 36.8% | 362 | 43.5% | 1.2 times |
| USA, Hawaii | Derauf et al. [ | 1999 | 422 | Urban regional perinatal center | 29 (median) | Medical record | 1st trimester: 5 (21.7%); 1st & 2nd trimester: 2 (8.7%); All three trimesters: 4 (17.4%); Not documented: 12 (52.2%) | 50 n▪g/g | 18f | 4.3% | 72 | 17.1% | 4.0 times |
AUDIT: Alcohol Use Disorders Identification Test; FAEE: fatty acid ethyl esters; n/a: not available; SES: socio-economic status.
aLevels of increased sensitivity may not total percentage figures obtained via meconium testing divided by percentage figures obtained via self-reports due to rounding errors.
bPichini et al. [44] reported results for two study sites (Italy and Spain).
cReported “daily” consumption.
dHutson et al. [37] and Magri et al. [38,39] were published in iteration.
eDerauf et al. [40,41] are dual publication.
fExcludes 5 women who reported alcohol use during the first trimester only.
Figure 2The prevalence of prenatal alcohol exposure obtained using maternal self-reports versus meconium testing and the pooled prevalence estimate.
Figure 3The prevalence of prenatal alcohol exposure obtained using maternal self-reports versus meconium testing across seven sites in Italy. Footnote. Source: Pichini et al. [45].
Figure 4Forest plot of the prevalence of prenatal alcohol exposure as measured by maternal self-reports. Footnote. CI: confidence interval. a The size of the box around the point estimate is representative of the weight of the estimate used in calculating the aggregated point estimate.
Figure 5Forest plot of the prevalence of prenatal alcohol exposure as measured by meconium testing. Footnote. CI: confidence interval. a The size of the box around the point estimate is representative of the weight of the estimate used in calculating the aggregated point estimate.
Figure 6Funnel plot of the prevalence of prenatal alcohol exposure as measured by maternal self-reports.
Figure 7Funnel plot of the prevalence of prenatal alcohol exposure as measured by meconium testing.
Results of the meta-regression testing for a difference in the prevalence estimates of prenatal alcohol exposure as measured by maternal self-reports and those obtained by meconium testing
| Log-odds model 1a | Meconium testing (as compared to maternal self-reports) | 4.41 | 0.82 | 23.76 | 0.08 |
| Log-odds model 2b | Meconium testing (as compared to maternal self-reports) | 4.26 | 1.34 | 13.57 | 0.02 |
aNot controlling for between study differences in measurement.
bControlling for between study differences in measurement.