Prevalence of aneuploidies in South Carolina in the 1990s

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Abstract

Purpose: Folate insufficiency due to nutritional deficiency or folate processing gene mutations has been proposed as a trisomy 21 risk factor. This study examined the possibility that increased folic acid intake among women of childbearing age may decrease the prevalence of trisomy 21 and other aneuploidies. Methods: The prevalence of aneuploidies from 1990 through 1999 was compared with folic acid use in women of childbearing age in South Carolina. Results: Folic acid use and the prevalence of all aneuploidies significantly increased during this period. Conclusion: Increased folic acid utilization in South Carolina was not associated with decreased prevalence of trisomy 21 or other aneuploidies.

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Collins, J. S., Olson, R. L., DuPont, B. R., Wolff, D. J., Best, R. G., & Stevenson, R. E. (2002). Prevalence of aneuploidies in South Carolina in the 1990s. Genetics in Medicine, 4(3), 131–135. https://doi.org/10.1097/00125817-200205000-00006

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