Early-life predictors of fetal alcohol spectrum disorders

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Abstract

BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES: Fetal alcohol spectrum disorders (FASD) comprise the continuum of disabilities associated with prenatal alcohol exposure. Although infancy remains the most effective time for initiation of intervention services, current diagnostic schemes demonstrate the greatest confidence, accuracy, and reliability in school-aged children. Our aims for the current study were to identify growth, dysmorphology, and neurodevelopmental features in infants that were most predictive of FASD at age 5, thereby improving the timeliness of diagnoses. METHODS: A cohort of pregnant South African women attending primary health care clinics or giving birth in provincial hospitals was enrolled in the project. Children were followed longitudinally from birth to 60 months to determine their physical and developmental trajectories (N = 155). Standardized protocols were used to assess growth, dysmorphology, and development at 6 weeks and at 9, 18, 42, and 60 months. A structured maternal interview, including estimation of prenatal alcohol intake, was administered at 42 or 60 months. RESULTS: Growth restriction and total dysmorphology scores differentiated among children with and without FASD as early as 9 months (area under the receiver operating characteristic curve = 0.777; P

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APA

Kalberg, W. O., May, P. A., Buckley, D., Hasken, J. M., Marais, A. S., De Vries, M. M., … Hoyme, H. E. (2019). Early-life predictors of fetal alcohol spectrum disorders. Pediatrics, 144(6). https://doi.org/10.1542/peds.2018-2141

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