Folic Acid Supplementation in Europe : A EUROCAT Report : 68

Details

Serval ID
serval:BIB_1A5921D5CADF
Type
Inproceedings: an article in a conference proceedings.
Publication sub-type
Abstract (Abstract): shot summary in a article that contain essentials elements presented during a scientific conference, lecture or from a poster.
Collection
Publications
Institution
Title
Folic Acid Supplementation in Europe : A EUROCAT Report : 68
Title of the conference
30th Conference of the European Teratology Society
Author(s)
Abramsky L., Addor M.C., Armstrong N., Barisic I., Berghold A., Braz P., Calzolari E., Christiansen M., Cocchi G., Daltveit A., de Walle H., Dolk H., Edwards G., Gatt M., Gener B., Gillerot Y., Gjergia R., Goujard J., Haeusler M., Latos-Bielenska A., McDonnel B., Neville A., Ritvanen A., Rosato M., Rosch C., Steinbicker V.
Address
Hanover, 7th-11th September 2002
ISBN
1873-1708
Publication state
Published
Issued date
2002
Peer-reviewed
Oui
Volume
16
Series
Reproductive Toxicology
Pages
435-436
Language
english
Notes
Background: Neural Tube Defects (NTDs) are among the most commonly occurring fetal abnormalities and although it has been established for a decade that periconceptional folic acid supplementation reduces the risk of both recurrence and of first occurrence, implementation has proved to be an enormous public health challenge. This has been met in a variety of ways in different parts of the world with varying degrees of success. The
aim of this study was to establish what action was being taken across
Europe in relation to periconceptional folic acid supplementation and what
effect this was having on the prevalence of NTDs in Europe. Methods: EUROCAT is a network of 36 congenital anomaly registries in Europe collaborating in the epidemiological surveillance of congenital anomalies. Representatives from 17 countries participating in EUROCAT agreed to provide information about the folic acid situation in their country, and NTD rates were extracted from Central Registry database for 1980-1999. Findings presented here are preliminary. Results: At the beginning of 2002, official governmental recommendation that women planning a pregnancy should take 0.4 mg of folic acid supplementation daily was in operation in ten of the 17 countries. The earliest of those countries to introduce an official supplementation policy was the UK in 1992 and the latest was Spain in 2001. In the remaining seven participating countries, no official
government recommendation about supplementation was in place, however, professional bodies within a subset had in fact recommended supplementation. While foods fortified with folic acid are available in many of the countries surveyed, only Germany has legislation covering ortification
(100 g of grain must be fortified with not less than 30 µg of folic acid). Mandatory fortification is currently under consideration in Denmark, Switzerland and the United Kingdom. Only six countries had official health education initiatives: UK, Ireland, France, Netherlands, Norway and Denmark. Studies in most countries suggest that the majority of women remained unaware of the protective effect of folic acid and only a tiny minority took it at the appropriate time. Women in Ireland, the UK and Norway were found to be more likely to know about and take supplementation. Commencement of folic acid supplementation may be
affected by the mother's approach to 'planning' pregnancy. In most countries, it is not known what percentage of pregnancies are 'planned'. In
Germany, a number of studies found that between 66-72% of pregnancies were 'planned', estimates were found to be lower elsewhere. The prevalence of NTDs (including terminations) has not shown any steady decline in the 1990s across Europe. Conclusions: The potential for preventing neural tube defects by periconceptional folic acid supplementation is still far from being fulfilled in Europe.
References:
1. Chung NP, Cheng CY. Is cadmium chloride-induced inter-sertoli tight junction permeability barrier disruption a suitable in vitro model to study the events of junction disassembly during spermatogenesis in the rat testis?
Endocrinology May, 2001;142(5):1878-88.
2. Prozialeck WC, Lamar PC. Cadmium (Cd2+) disrupts E-cadherin-dependent cell-cell junctions in MDCK cells. In Vitro Cell Dev Biol Anim 1997;33(7):516-26.
Create date
02/04/2009 11:38
Last modification date
20/08/2019 13:51
Usage data