Parental age in relation to severity of clefting

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftKonferenceabstrakt i tidsskriftForskningfagfællebedømt

Standard

Parental age in relation to severity of clefting. / Hermann, Nuno Vibe; Darvann, Tron Andre; Kreiborg, Sven.

I: Cleft Palate - Craniofacial Journal, Bind 53, Nr. 4, 173, 2016.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftKonferenceabstrakt i tidsskriftForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Hermann, NV, Darvann, TA & Kreiborg, S 2016, 'Parental age in relation to severity of clefting', Cleft Palate - Craniofacial Journal, bind 53, nr. 4, 173. https://doi.org/10.1597/1545-1569-53.4.e101

APA

Hermann, N. V., Darvann, T. A., & Kreiborg, S. (2016). Parental age in relation to severity of clefting. Cleft Palate - Craniofacial Journal, 53(4), [173]. https://doi.org/10.1597/1545-1569-53.4.e101

Vancouver

Hermann NV, Darvann TA, Kreiborg S. Parental age in relation to severity of clefting. Cleft Palate - Craniofacial Journal. 2016;53(4). 173. https://doi.org/10.1597/1545-1569-53.4.e101

Author

Hermann, Nuno Vibe ; Darvann, Tron Andre ; Kreiborg, Sven. / Parental age in relation to severity of clefting. I: Cleft Palate - Craniofacial Journal. 2016 ; Bind 53, Nr. 4.

Bibtex

@article{672d29a3914a412bae248c1ca495b7c6,
title = "Parental age in relation to severity of clefting",
abstract = "Background/Purpose. Studies have indicated that increased parental age may be one of several predisposing factors for development of cleft lip and palate. The aim of the present study was to investigate the parental age in relation to severity of cleft diagnosis in a Danish population study of cleft individuals, as well as to compare parental age in the cleft population with normative values of parental age. It was hypothesized that there was no difference in parental age between the cleft groups with incomplete and complete clefts, respectively.Methods/Descriptions. The consecutive non-syndromic cleft sample comprised 678 individuals (equal to the number of individuals born with a cleft in Denmark during a 6-year period). In 608 cases maternal and paternal age were recorded, and of these cases 285 were firstborns; 71 had a Complete Cleft Lip and/or Palate (CC) and 192 had an Incomplete Cleft Lip and/or Palate (IC). Wilcoxon Rank-Sum test (5% significance level) was applied in order to test for group differences. Standard logistic regression was used in order to estimate the risk of developing CC relative to IC.Results. In the group with CC mean paternal age was 29.5+/-4.5 (1SD) years and mean maternal age was 25.4+/-3.8 years. In the group with IC mean paternal age was 27.0+/-6.1 years and mean maternal age was 24.1+/-4.7 years. Both paternal and maternal age was significantly higher in the group with CC than in the group with IC (p(paternal)=0.001; p(maternal)=0.022). The mean parental ages in the group with IC did not differ from normative population values during the same time period. Logistic regression showed for paternal age OR=1.1[1.04,1.16](Wald confidence limits); for maternal age 1.08[1.01,1.15].Conclusions. The hypothesis was rejected. Parental age was significantly higher in the group with CC than in the group with IC, where the parental age was comparable to normative values. Increased parental age seems to be a risk factor for CC in the off-spring with an increased risk of having a CC (compared to IC) of 10% per year of increase in paternal age, and 8% per year of increase in maternal age.",
author = "Hermann, {Nuno Vibe} and Darvann, {Tron Andre} and Sven Kreiborg",
year = "2016",
doi = "10.1597/1545-1569-53.4.e101",
language = "English",
volume = "53",
journal = "Cleft Palate - Craniofacial Journal",
issn = "1055-6656",
publisher = "Allen Press Inc.",
number = "4",
note = "null ; Conference date: 18-04-2016 Through 22-04-2016",

}

RIS

TY - ABST

T1 - Parental age in relation to severity of clefting

AU - Hermann, Nuno Vibe

AU - Darvann, Tron Andre

AU - Kreiborg, Sven

N1 - Conference code: 73

PY - 2016

Y1 - 2016

N2 - Background/Purpose. Studies have indicated that increased parental age may be one of several predisposing factors for development of cleft lip and palate. The aim of the present study was to investigate the parental age in relation to severity of cleft diagnosis in a Danish population study of cleft individuals, as well as to compare parental age in the cleft population with normative values of parental age. It was hypothesized that there was no difference in parental age between the cleft groups with incomplete and complete clefts, respectively.Methods/Descriptions. The consecutive non-syndromic cleft sample comprised 678 individuals (equal to the number of individuals born with a cleft in Denmark during a 6-year period). In 608 cases maternal and paternal age were recorded, and of these cases 285 were firstborns; 71 had a Complete Cleft Lip and/or Palate (CC) and 192 had an Incomplete Cleft Lip and/or Palate (IC). Wilcoxon Rank-Sum test (5% significance level) was applied in order to test for group differences. Standard logistic regression was used in order to estimate the risk of developing CC relative to IC.Results. In the group with CC mean paternal age was 29.5+/-4.5 (1SD) years and mean maternal age was 25.4+/-3.8 years. In the group with IC mean paternal age was 27.0+/-6.1 years and mean maternal age was 24.1+/-4.7 years. Both paternal and maternal age was significantly higher in the group with CC than in the group with IC (p(paternal)=0.001; p(maternal)=0.022). The mean parental ages in the group with IC did not differ from normative population values during the same time period. Logistic regression showed for paternal age OR=1.1[1.04,1.16](Wald confidence limits); for maternal age 1.08[1.01,1.15].Conclusions. The hypothesis was rejected. Parental age was significantly higher in the group with CC than in the group with IC, where the parental age was comparable to normative values. Increased parental age seems to be a risk factor for CC in the off-spring with an increased risk of having a CC (compared to IC) of 10% per year of increase in paternal age, and 8% per year of increase in maternal age.

AB - Background/Purpose. Studies have indicated that increased parental age may be one of several predisposing factors for development of cleft lip and palate. The aim of the present study was to investigate the parental age in relation to severity of cleft diagnosis in a Danish population study of cleft individuals, as well as to compare parental age in the cleft population with normative values of parental age. It was hypothesized that there was no difference in parental age between the cleft groups with incomplete and complete clefts, respectively.Methods/Descriptions. The consecutive non-syndromic cleft sample comprised 678 individuals (equal to the number of individuals born with a cleft in Denmark during a 6-year period). In 608 cases maternal and paternal age were recorded, and of these cases 285 were firstborns; 71 had a Complete Cleft Lip and/or Palate (CC) and 192 had an Incomplete Cleft Lip and/or Palate (IC). Wilcoxon Rank-Sum test (5% significance level) was applied in order to test for group differences. Standard logistic regression was used in order to estimate the risk of developing CC relative to IC.Results. In the group with CC mean paternal age was 29.5+/-4.5 (1SD) years and mean maternal age was 25.4+/-3.8 years. In the group with IC mean paternal age was 27.0+/-6.1 years and mean maternal age was 24.1+/-4.7 years. Both paternal and maternal age was significantly higher in the group with CC than in the group with IC (p(paternal)=0.001; p(maternal)=0.022). The mean parental ages in the group with IC did not differ from normative population values during the same time period. Logistic regression showed for paternal age OR=1.1[1.04,1.16](Wald confidence limits); for maternal age 1.08[1.01,1.15].Conclusions. The hypothesis was rejected. Parental age was significantly higher in the group with CC than in the group with IC, where the parental age was comparable to normative values. Increased parental age seems to be a risk factor for CC in the off-spring with an increased risk of having a CC (compared to IC) of 10% per year of increase in paternal age, and 8% per year of increase in maternal age.

U2 - 10.1597/1545-1569-53.4.e101

DO - 10.1597/1545-1569-53.4.e101

M3 - Conference abstract in journal

C2 - 27447885

VL - 53

JO - Cleft Palate - Craniofacial Journal

JF - Cleft Palate - Craniofacial Journal

SN - 1055-6656

IS - 4

M1 - 173

Y2 - 18 April 2016 through 22 April 2016

ER -

ID: 177333991