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. 2022 Apr;91(5):1278-1285.
doi: 10.1038/s41390-021-01629-w. Epub 2021 Jun 30.

Birth defect co-occurrence patterns in the Texas Birth Defects Registry

Affiliations

Birth defect co-occurrence patterns in the Texas Birth Defects Registry

Renata H Benjamin et al. Pediatr Res. 2022 Apr.

Abstract

Background: The population-level landscape of co-occurring birth defects among infants without a syndromic diagnosis is not well understood.

Methods: We analyzed data from 40,771 infants with two or more major birth defects in the Texas Birth Defects Registry (TBDR; 1999-2014). We calculated adjusted observed-to-expected (O/E) ratios for all two, three, four, and five-way combinations of 138 major defects.

Results: Among 530 patterns with the highest adjusted O/E ratios (top 5% of 10,595 patterns), 66% included only defects co-occurring within one organ system and 28% were suggestive of known patterns (e.g., midline developmental defects). Of the remaining patterns, the combination of defects with the highest O/E ratio (193.8) encompassed the diaphragm, spine, spleen, and heart defects. Fourteen patterns involved heart and spine defects with or without rib defects. Ten additional patterns primarily involved two hallmark components of VACTERL association (specifically, vertebral defects, anal atresia, cardiac defects, renal, or limb defects, but not tracheoesophageal fistula).

Conclusions: Our analyses provide a description of the birth defect co-occurrence patterns in a multi-ethnic, population-based sample, and revealed several patterns of interest. This work complements prior work that has suggested etiologic connections between select defects (e.g., diaphragmatic hernia and heart and spleen anomalies; heart and spine defects).

Impact: In this large-scale, population-based study of birth defect co-occurrence patterns, we found several birth defect combinations of potential interest that warrant further investigation: congenital diaphragmatic hernia, heart, spine, and spleen defects and scimitar syndrome with vertebral defects. The majority of patterns of co-occurring defects observed more frequently than expected involved multiple defects within the same system and combinations suggestive of known associations. Nearly all of the top patterns (beyond the same system and those suggestive of known associations) involved organ systems that are components of the VACTERL association, with heart, spine, and rib defect patterns being the most common.

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Conflict of interest statement

Disclosure Statement: The authors declare no conflict of interest.

Figures

Figure 1.
Figure 1.
Flow chart of the review process of top birth defect combinations among non-syndromic cases, Texas Birth Defects Registry, 1999–2014
Figure 2.
Figure 2.
Venn diagram of the five VACTERL component organ systems represented in the top 27 birth defect patterns, where the count represents the number of combinations that include the indicated defects (e.g., 15 of the top 27 combinations include heart and spine defects), Texas Birth Defects Registry, 1999–2014

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Publication types

Supplementary concepts