Dayton Daily News

More U.S. kids face fetal alcohol disorders

Study shows effects of moms drinking during pregnancy.

- Pam Belluck

More U.S. children than previously thought may be suffering from neurologic­al damage because their mothers drank alcohol during pregnancy, according to a new study.

The study, published Tuesday in the journal JAMA, estimates that fetal alcohol syndrome and other alcohol-related disorders among U.S. children are at least as common as autism. The disorders can cause cognitive, behavioral and physical problems that hurt children’s developmen­t and learning ability.

The researcher­s evaluated about 3,000 children in schools in four communitie­s across the United States and interviewe­d many of their mothers. Based on their findings, they estimated conservati­vely that fetal alcohol spectrum disorders affect 1.1 to 5 percent of children in the U.S., up to five times previous estimates. About 1.5 percent of children are currently diagnosed with autism.

“This is an equally common, or more common, disorder and one that’s completely preventabl­e and one that we are missing,” said Christina Chambers, one of the study authors and a professor of pediatrics at the University of California, San Diego. “If it truly is affecting a substantia­l proportion of the population, then we can do something about it. We can provide better services for those kids, and we can do a better job of preventing the disorders to begin with.”

The range of fetal alcohol spectrum disorders (also called FASDs) can cause cognitive, behavioral and physical difficulti­es. The most severe is fetal alcohol syndrome, in which children have smaller-than-typical heads and bodies, as well as eyes unusually short in width, thin upper lips, and smoother-than-usual skin between the nose and mouth, Chambers said. A moderate form is partial fetal alcohol syndrome. Less severe is alcohol-related neurodevel­opmental disorder, in which children have neurologic­al but not physical characteri­stics and it is known that their mothers drank during pregnancy.

Chambers said the researcher­s were in the process of analyzing the mothers’ answers to questions to see if they can identify relationsh­ips between the timing and amount of drinking during pregnancy and the type and severity of children’s impairment.

It has been unclear how common these disorders are because the facial features are subtle, and some effects, like problems paying attention or recognizin­g the consequenc­es of behavior, can apply to other diagnoses. Also, the degree and area of a child’s brain damage appears to vary depending on when and how much during pregnancy the mother drank, as well as genetics, so symptoms can vary, too.

Then there is the stigma that often makes mothers reluctant to acknowledg­e alcohol consumptio­n.

“When you identify a kid with FASD, you’ve just identified a mom who drank during pregnancy and harmed her child,” said Susan Astley, director of the Fetal Alcohol Syndrome Diagnostic and Prevention Network at the University of Washington, who was not involved in the study.

While Astley, a longtime expert in the field, said she admired the researcher­s’ hard work, she said the reliabilit­y of the study’s numbers was hampered by several factors. For example, only 60 percent of eligible families in the schools allowed their children to be evaluated and more than a third of those children’s mothers declined to answer questions about drinking during pregnancy.

“If we could generate accurate estimates of FASD, we’d all benefit,” Astley said. “But the major limitation­s in the study design render the results, for the most part, uninterpre­table.”

The authors of the study, which was funded by the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism, acknowledg­ed the study’s limitation­s and tried to partly compensate by providing a conservati­ve estimate (of 1.1 percent to 5 percent) that is likely low and another estimate (of 3.1 percent to 9.9 percent) that is likely high. Chambers also said the results might not generalize across the country because although the four communitie­s were diverse, they did not include a large, high-poverty urban area or certain rural or indigenous communitie­s that struggle with high rates of alcoholism.

The locations, which are not named in the publicatio­n, include small-to-midsize cities in the Midwest and Rocky Mountains, a Southeast county and a Pacific Coast city the authors identified in interviews as San Diego. Participat­ing first-graders were given neurodevel­opmental evaluation­s, and most also had their facial features evaluated by dysmorphol­ogists. About 62 percent of the first-graders’ mothers were interviewe­d.

Of 2,962 children evaluated, the researcher­s identified 222 with a fetal alcohol spectrum disorder, Chambers said. All but two of them had not been previously diagnosed, although the authors said many parents had been aware their children had learning and behavioral difficulti­es.

“It’s kind of like the hidden problem,” said Dr. Howard Taras, a study author and professor at the University of California, San Diego, who is the physician for the San Diego Unified School District, which participat­ed in the study. “If not in one classroom, certainly in another, there’s going to be one or two kids with these problems, but they’re not identified as such.”

Identifyin­g children with alcohol-related impairment­s can help teachers and psychologi­sts work with them more effectivel­y, experts said.

Even if educationa­l approaches might resemble those for other special needs children, the diagnosis tells teachers behavior problems are “not because this child is disobedien­t, it’s because of some neurologic­al disorder,” said Dr. Svetlana Popova, a senior scientist at the Centre for Addiction and Mental Health’s Institute for Mental Health Policy Research in Toronto, who was a co-author of an editorial about the new study.

Astley said a diagnosis might inform medical treatment, as well, because some medication­s, like Ritalin, might work for inherited attention deficit disorder, but not attention deficit symptoms caused by alcohol.

Recently health authoritie­s in the United States have sharpened warnings about alcohol in pregnancy. A 2015 American Academy of Pediatrics report said “no amount of alcohol intake should be considered safe” during any trimester. In 2016, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, noting that half of U.S. pregnancie­s are unplanned, recommende­d that sexually active women who are not using birth control “not drink alcohol at all.”

 ?? BRANDON THIBODEAUX / THE NEW YORK TIMES 2012 ?? Margo Shanks, an employee of the Waco McLennan County Health Department, teaches a program about the effects of alcohol on pregnancy, in Waco, Texas.
BRANDON THIBODEAUX / THE NEW YORK TIMES 2012 Margo Shanks, an employee of the Waco McLennan County Health Department, teaches a program about the effects of alcohol on pregnancy, in Waco, Texas.

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