Cardiovascular birth defects and antenatal exposure to female sex hormones

  • University of Pennsylvania ROR
  • Tufts University ROR

The New England Journal of Medicine, 296(2), 67-70

DOI 10.1056/NEJM197701132960202 PMID 830309

Abstract

In a cohort of 50,282 pregnancies 19 children with cardiovascular defects were born to 1042 women who received female hormones during early pregnancy (18.2 per 1000). Among 49,240 children not exposed in utero to these agents there were 385 with cardiovascular malformations (7.8 per 1000). Six children with cardiovascular defects were born to a sub-group of 278 women who used oral contraceptives during early pregnancy (21.5 per 1000). After the data were controlled for a wide variety of potentially confounding factors by multivariate methods, the association between in utero exposure to female hormones and cardiovascular birth defects was statistically significant.

Topics

antenatal female sex hormone exposure cardiovascular birth defects, oral contraceptive use early pregnancy congenital heart defects, in utero hormone exposure cardiovascular malformation risk, Heinonen prenatal hormone exposure birth defects cohort, exogenous estrogen progesterone pregnancy cardiac anomalies, female hormone teratogenicity cardiovascular system, prenatal oral contraceptive exposure congenital anomalies, multivariate analysis hormone exposure birth defects cohort study, hormonal contraception inadvertent pregnancy fetal cardiac defects, Shapiro Slone prenatal drug exposure epidemiology
PMID 830309 830309 DOI 10.1056/NEJM197701132960202 10.1056/NEJM197701132960202

Cite this article

Heinonen, O. P., Slone, D., Monson, R. R., Hook, E. B., & Shapiro, S. (1977). Cardiovascular birth defects and antenatal exposure to female sex hormones. *The New England journal of medicine*, *296*(2), 67-70. https://doi.org/10.1056/NEJM197701132960202

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