Alcohol Binges
Early In Pregnancy Increase Risk Of Infant Oral Clefts
Reported August 01, 2008
ScienceDaily (Aug. 1, 2008) — A new study by
researchers at the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences (NIEHS),
part of the National Institutes of Health, shows that pregnant women who
binge drink early in their pregnancy increase the likelihood that their
babies will be born with oral clefts.
The researchers found that women who consumed an average of five or more
drinks per sitting were more than twice as likely than non-drinkers to have
an infant with either of the two major infant oral clefts: cleft lip with or
without cleft palate, or cleft palate alone. Women who drank at this level
on three or more occasions during the first trimester were three times as
likely to have infants born with oral clefts.
"These findings reinforce the fact that women should not drink alcohol
during pregnancy," said Lisa A. DeRoo, Ph.D., an epidemiologist at NIEHS and
author on the study. "Prenatal exposure to alcohol, especially excessive
amounts at one time, can adversely affect the fetus and may increase the
risk of infant clefts." The causes of clefts are largely unknown, but both
genetic predisposition and environmental factors are believed to play a role
in their development.
The population-based study was conducted in Norway, which has one of the
highest rates of oral clefts in Europe. The investigators contacted all
families of newborn infants born with clefts between 1996 and 2002. The
study included 573 mothers who had babies born with cleft lip with or
without cleft palate and cleft palate only; as well as 763 mothers randomly
selected from all live births in Norway. The average age of the mostly
married mothers was 29 years.
Mothers completed a self-administered mailed questionnaire focused heavily
on the mother's lifestyle and environmental exposures during her first three
months of pregnancy when a baby's facial development takes place.
The researchers found increased risks of orofacial clefts
among infants whose mothers reported binge-level drinking of an average of
five or more drinks per occasion during the first-trimester compared to
non-drinkers. Risk was further increased among women who drank at this level
most frequently.
Both animal and human data suggest that it is the dose of alcohol consumed
at one time during pregnancy rather than the frequency or total amount over
time that matters most. "The greater the blood alcohol concentration, the
longer the fetus is exposed. A single binge during a critical period of an
infant's development can be harmful," said DeRoo.
"Fortunately, heavy maternal drinking is uncommon in many populations, but
the fact that it is happening at all tells us we need to do a better job of
letting mothers know about the effects that alcohol can have on their baby's
development," said Allen J. Wilcox, M.D., Ph.D., NIEHS researcher and
co-author on the paper. In Norway, a separate study found that 25 percent of
Norwegian women reported at least one binge drinking episode early during
pregnancy.
Alcohol is a recognized teratogen, or an environmental agent that can cause
malformations of an embryo or fetus. One of the most severe outcomes of
heavy maternal drinking is fetal alcohol syndrome, a lifelong condition that
causes physical and mental disabilities, including craniofacial
malformations. There has been little research to determine if alcohol
consumption is related to oral cleft risk.
The research was supported by the Intramural Research Program of the NIH,
NIEHS. Researchers at the University of Bergen, the University of Oslo and
the Medical Birth Registry of Norway also contributed to this study.
Source : ScienceDaily