Multivitamin/folic acid supplementation in early pregnancy reduces the prevalence of neural tube defects.

We examined the relation of multivitamin intake in general, and folic acid in particular, to the risk of neural tube defects in a cohort of 23,491 women undergoing maternal serum alpha-fetoprotein screening or amniocentesis around 16 weeks of gestation. Complete questionnaires and subsequent pregnancy outcome information was obtained in 22,776 pregnancies, 49 of which ended in a neural tube defect. The prevalence of neural tube defect was 3.5 per 1000 among women who never used multivitamins before or after conception or who used multivitamins before conception only. The prevalence of neural tube defects for women who used folic acid-containing multivitamins during the first 6 weeks of pregnancy was substantially lower--0.9 per 1000 (prevalence ratio, 0.27; 95% confidence interval, 0.12 to 0.59 compared with never users). For women who used multivitamins without folic acid during the first 6 weeks of pregnancy and women who used multivitamins containing folic acid beginning after 7 or more weeks of pregnancy, the prevalences were similar to that of the nonusers and the prevalence ratios were close to 1.0.

[1]  J. Thiersch Therapeutic abortions with a folic acid antagonist, 4-aminopteroylglutamic acid (4-amino P.G.A) administered by the oral route. , 1952, American journal of obstetrics and gynecology.

[2]  L. Saxén,et al.  Prospective versus retrospective approach in the search for environmental causes of malformations. , 1967, American Journal of Public Health and the Nations Health.

[3]  A. Read,et al.  VITAMIN SUPPLEMENTATION AND NEURAL TUBE DEFECTS , 1981, The Lancet.

[4]  J. Mulinare Periconceptional Use of Multivitamins and the Occurrence of Neural Tube Defects , 1988 .

[5]  H. Hoffman,et al.  The absence of a relation between the periconceptional use of vitamins and neural-tube defects. National Institute of Child Health and Human Development Neural Tube Defects Study Group. , 1989, The New England journal of medicine.

[6]  R. Smithells,et al.  FOLIC ACID METABOLISM AND HUMAN EMBRYOPATHY , 1965 .

[7]  R. Berry,et al.  Periconceptional use of multivitamins and the occurrence of neural tube defects. , 1989, JAMA.

[8]  K. Rothman,et al.  Epidemiologic Analysis with a Programmable Calculator , 1982 .

[9]  C. Schorah,et al.  Vitamin dificiencies and neural tube defects. , 1976, Archives of disease in childhood.

[10]  K. Laurence,et al.  Double-blind randomised controlled trial of folate treatment before conception to prevent recurrence of neural-tube defects. , 1981 .

[11]  M. Seller,et al.  Periconceptional vitamin supplementation and the prevention of neural tube defects in south-east England and Northern Ireland. , 1984, Journal of medical genetics.

[12]  Perloff Bp,et al.  Folacin in selected foods. , 1977 .

[13]  C. Carter,et al.  Clues to the Aetiology of Neural Tube Malformations * , 1974, Developmental medicine and child neurology.

[14]  J. Edwards Congenital Malformations of the Central Nervous System in Scotland , 1958, British journal of preventive & social medicine.

[15]  A. Milunsky The Prenatal Diagnosis of Neural Tube and Other Congenital Defects , 1986 .

[16]  J. Elwood,et al.  Epidemiology of Anencephalus and Spina Bifida , 1980 .

[17]  P. Tasker Folic acid and vitamin B12. Effects of graded doses in the treatment of tropical nutritional megaloblastic anaemia. , 1960, Transactions of the Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene.