Abstract
About a decade ago, a hypothesis was put forward to explain the preponderance of females among neural tube defect (NTD) fetuses. That hypothesis predicts that a woman's higher levels of early gestational intake of methyl groups, such as folic acid, will be associated with lesser male-to-female ratio differences in NTD-affected births, specifically less preponderance of females. We explored this hypothesis in four distinct studies that investigated human NTDs, obtained information on folic acid, and capitalized on timing of folic acid fortification by investigating data that were collected both prior to and after the 1998 initiation of U.S. mandatory folic acid fortification of grains. We analyzed data from four population-based case control studies conducted in California for birth years spanning 1987-2011. Two studies were conducted before folic acid fortification of the U.S. food supply. Each of the four studies included interviews of women who either had NTD-affected pregnancies (cases) or who did not have a pregnancy affected by a birth defect (controls). In each study, information on periconceptional supplement use was elicited. We explored male-to-female ratios and 95% binomial confidence limits in each data set. Our analyses of two case-control studies performed prior to and two performed post mandatory folate fortification in the United States showed that more NTD-affected fetuses were female in the first two studies. In the studies done before fortification, the frequency of females was even greater among those pregnancies without folic acid supplementation. Our findings suggest folic acid may differentially reduce risk of NTDs among female fetuses.
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