While the prevalences of spina bifida and anencephaly in the United States have declined since folic acid fortification in the food supply began, these data suggest that reductions in the prevalence of anencephaly continued during 2001-2004 and that racial and ethnic and other disparities remain.
Background
Hispanics in the US have a higher prevalence of neural tube defect (NTD)-affected pregnancies than non-Hispanic whites, and lower median total folic acid (FA) intake. FA fortification of corn masa flour (CMF) is a policy-level intervention for NTD prevention; however, the impact on NTD prevalence has not been estimated.
Methods
We developed a model to estimate the percentage reduction in prevalence of spina bifida and anencephaly that could occur with FA fortification of CMF. Model inputs included estimates of the percentage reduction in prevalence attributed to FA fortification of enriched cereal grain products (ECGP) (1995–1996 vs. 1998–2002), the increase in median FA intake after ECGP fortification, and the estimated increase in median FA intake that could occur with CMF fortification at the same level as ECGP (140μg/100g). We used Monte Carlo simulation to quantify uncertainty. We stratified analyses by racial/ethnic group and rounded results to the nearest 10.
Results
We estimated CMF fortification could prevent 30 Hispanic infants from having spina bifida (95% uncertainty interval: 0,80) and 10 infants from having anencephaly (95% uncertainty interval: 0,40) annually. The estimated impact among non-Hispanic whites and blacks was smaller.
Conclusions
CMF fortification with FA could prevent from 0 to 120 infants, with the most likely value of approximately 40, from having spina bifida or anencephaly among Hispanics, the population most likely to benefit from the proposed intervention. While this estimated reduction is unlikely to be discernible using current birth defect surveillance methods, it suggests an important benefit to the target population.
Background
Obtaining accurate microcephaly prevalence is important given the recent association between microcephaly and Zika virus. Assessing the quality of data sources can guide surveillance programs as they focus their data collection efforts. The Utah Birth Defect Network (UBDN) has monitored microcephaly by data sources since 2003. The objective of this study was to examine the impact of reporting sources for microcephaly surveillance.
Methods
All reported cases of microcephaly among Utah mothers from 2003 to 2013 were clinically reviewed and confirmed. The UBDN database was linked to state vital records and hospital discharge data for analysis. Reporting sources were analyzed for positive predictive value and sensitivity.
Results
Of the 477 reported cases of microcephaly, 251 (52.6%) were confirmed as true cases. The UBDN identified 94 additional cases that were reported to the surveillance system as another birth defect, but were ultimately determined to be true microcephaly cases. The prevalence for microcephaly based on the UBDN medical record abstraction and clinical review was 8.2 per 10,000 live births. Data sources varied in the number and accuracy of reporting, but a case was more likely to be a true case if identified from multiple sources than from a single source.
Conclusion
While some reporting sources are more likely to identify possible and true microcephaly cases, maintaining a multiple source methodology allows for more complete case ascertainment. Surveillance programs should conduct periodic assessments of data sources to ensure their systems are capturing all possible birth defects cases.
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