Alarming Birth Defect Rises Sharply in Past 20 Years

About 2K babies are now born with gastroschisis every year
By Elizabeth Armstrong Moore,  Newser Staff
Posted Jan 22, 2016 8:50 AM CST
Alarming Birth Defect Rises Sharply in Past 20 Years
Gastroschisis has risen fastest among babies born to young African-American women.   (Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, National Center on Birth Defects and Developmental Disabilities)

It's a birth defect the Los Angeles Times calls "bizarre": gastroschisis, where the intestines (and sometimes other organs) protrude out of a hole in the abdominal wall. And in its weekly "Morbidity and Mortality" report, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention sounds an alarm. The prevalence of the defect nearly doubled between 1995 and 2005 and it increased another 30% in the seven years following to 4.9 in 10,000 births—but there's no explanation why. Nearly 2,000 babies are now born in the US with the defect annually. The researchers note that the sharpest jump in prevalence—263% between 1995 and 2012—was among babies born to African-American women under the age of 20, though an increase was seen across every age and racial group, reports US News & World Report. (Still, the prevalence in black mothers "remains lower than in white and Hispanic mothers.")

And while researchers have for decades associated young maternal age with gastroschisis, the increased prevalence has coincided with a decline in live births among teens. The defect is often fixed with surgery, but the condition can be life-threatening, with organs exposed to amniotic fluid possibly becoming swollen or infected, triggering longer-term feeding and digestion issues, reports the Times. "We're really trying to dig into the 'why'" via federally supported studies, CDC epidemiologist Suzanne Gilboa says. So far the only clues are that women who use alcohol or tobacco while pregnant, or who are underweight prior to pregnancy or have an STD, run a greater risk of having a baby with gastroschisis, but whether this contributes to the early development of an infant's weaker abdominal wall remains unclear. (This virus may be behind some birth defects.)

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