Abstract

The aim of present study was to check the possible association of potential parental environmental exposures and maternal supplementation intake with the risk of nonsyndromic orofacial clefting (NSOC). A retrospective study comprised 499 cases and 480 controls was conducted in Heilongjiang Province. Chi-square analysis and unconditional multiple logistic regression were used in the study. The results showed that maternal history of fever and the common cold without fever (ORCL/P = 3.11 and 5.56, 95%CI: 1.67–5.82 and 2.96–10.47, ORCPO = 3.31 and 8.23, 95%CI: 1.58–6.94 and 4.08–16.95), paternal smoking and alcohol consumption (ORCL/P = 2.15 and 5.04, 95%CI: 1.37–3.38 and 3.00–8.46, ORCPO = 1.82 and 4.40, 95%CI: 1.06–3.13 and 2.50–7.74), maternal exposure to organic solvents, heavy metals, or pesticides (ORCL/P = 6.07, 5.67 and 5.97, 95%CI: 1.49–24.76, 1.34–24.09 and 2.10–16.98, ORCPO = 10.65, 7.28 and 3.48, 95%CI: 2.54–44.67, 1.41–37.63 and 1.06–11.46) and multivitamin use during the preconception period (ORCL/P = 0.06, 95%CI: 0.02–0.23, ORCPO = 0.06, 95%CI: 0.01–0.30) were associated with cleft lip or without cleft palate (CL/P) and cleft palate only (CPO). Maternal history of skin disease and negative life events (ORCL/P = 12.07 and 1.67, 95%CI: 1.81–80.05 and 1.95–2.67) were associated with CL/P. Some potential parental hazardous exposures during the periconception period and maternal use of multivitamins during the preconception period were associated with risk of NSOC.

Highlights

  • Orofacial clefting is among the most common of all human congenital birth defects, with an incidence of 1/500 to 1/1000 births worldwide [1]

  • Cases were divided into two groups: patients with cleft palate only (CPO group) and cleft lip with or without cleft palate (CL/P group). (Cleft lip and cleft lip with cleft palate share a common development process.) We randomly selected 480 unrelated healthy controls from the same hospitals after rigorous screening and infants were eligible to serve as a control only if they had no congenital malformations

  • This study examined the association of several certain environmental exposures with risk of nonsyndromic orofacial clefts and its two subtypes

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Summary

Introduction

Orofacial clefting is among the most common of all human congenital birth defects, with an incidence of 1/500 to 1/1000 births worldwide [1]. Numerous studies have demonstrated that the incidence is highest among Asians, followed by Caucasians, and lowest in people of African descent [2]. Metabolic, hormonal, lifestyle, and genetic factors determine the nutritional status of the mother and could thereby affect organogenesis and growth of the conceptus [6]. Derangements in these molecular processes caused by polymorphisms in developmental genes and/or environmental exposures are suggested to cause nonsyndromic orofacial clefts [7]

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