The latest annual report by the British Isles Network of Congenital Anomaly Registers (BINOCAR) has said that more than one baby in every 50 is born with a birth defect
The latest annual report by the British Isles Network of Congenital Anomaly Registers (BINOCAR) has said that more than one baby in every 50 is born with a birth defect. This number is significantly more common than previously reported estimates of around one in 80. The study* – led by researchers at Queen Mary, University of London and commissioned by the Healthcare Quality Improvement Partnership (HQIP) – is the most up-to-date and comprehensive of its kind, bringing together existing data in England and Wales from 2005 to 2009.
However, the report's authors remain concerned that data for substantial parts of the country, including London, are not currently monitored, meaning large regional increases in birth defects could go unnoticed and their causes not investigated.
"This is a major issue," commented Joan Morris, Professor of Medical Statistics at Queen Mary, University of London and editor of the report. "It is essential we know how many babies are being born with anomalies and how good their survival is across the whole country, so we can identify ways to reduce the occurrence of anomalies and plan for the care of these babies."
This national report includes data from five regional registers and two disease specific national registers†. Three additional registers exist and it is hoped that with further funding they will contribute data to future reports. Currently there are no registers in London and the South East, the North West and East Anglia.
Professor Elizabeth Draper from the University of Leicester who is Chair of BINOCAR commented: "This report is important, not least because it highlights the need to increase the number of regional registers in England. We are very grateful for the ongoing support from HQIP, but to provide national coverage will require a sustained commitment of additional resources. Funding for national surveillance of congenital anomalies is being considered as part of the surveillance program in Public Health England and we hope it will be in place by April 2013."
The number and types of birth defects have been monitored since the thalidomide epidemic in the 1960s. Under the original system, cases were notified to the Office for National Statistics by doctors, nurses, midwives and health visitors. Since the 1980s, regional registers have been established in some parts of the country to actively collect data from hospitals, laboratories and health records.
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- Previous estimates, based on data from the Office for National Statistics, suggested that 1.3 per cent of babies have a birth defect. The new report indicates that the figure is more than two per cent.
- The researchers estimate that there were at least 14,500 babies born with birth defects in England and Wales in 2009.
- The most common defect was congenital heart disease, which affects at least five in 1,000 births. Some cases require major operations and around six per cent of babies born with a heart defect will die before the age of one.
- Neural tube defects, such as spina bifida, affect one in 1,000 babies, many of these may be prevented by women taking folic acid supplements before becoming pregnant.
- Gastroschisis – a defect where the intestines develop outside the abdomen – affect one in 1,000 babies. Regional monitoring has shown that this condition has become more common in some areas including Wales and that babies born to younger mothers are at greater risk.
- Over half of all major birth defects were detected during pregnancy.
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