Genetic Disorders and the Fetus. Группа авторов

Genetic Disorders and the Fetus - Группа авторов


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A later report from the Paris Registry of Congenital Anomalies (2001–2005) noted a “fairly stable prevalence of Down syndrome (7.1 per 10,000 livebirths) over time.”111 A Scottish study aimed to assess the impact of prenatal diagnosis on the prevalence of Down syndrome from 1980 to 1996. Both births and pregnancy terminations were included. Pregnancy terminations for Down syndrome rose from 29 percent to about 60 percent.112 In contrast, the prevalence of Down syndrome noted by the Dutch Paediatric Surveillance Unit in 2003 was 16 per 10,000 livebirths, exceeding earlier reports and thought to reflect an older maternal age cohort.113 In the United States, a prevalence rate of 8.27 per 10,000 was reported in 2013 with an estimated 250,700 individuals.114, 115 In Europe, the 2009–2012 prevalence rate was 10.2 per 100,000 livebirths.116 In Japan, the estimated prevalence rate approximates 22 per 10,000 births.117 Many more babies with Down syndrome are born to women under rather than over 35 years of age. There is some evidence that the risk of having Down syndrome offspring in very young mothers is increased,118121 but not in twin pregnancies.122

Age Total Survival at start of age interval (percent)
5 1,020 81.05
10 841 78.40
20 497 75.34
30 91 72.12
40 136 69.78
50 57 60.68
55 31 53.96
60 16 44.44
68 1 13.57

      Source: Baird and Sadovnick 1989.127 With permission from John Wiley and Sons.

      Additional studies of mortality rates in individuals with Down syndrome revealed that those up to about 35 years of age were little different from others with intellectual disability. Thereafter, however, mortality rates in Down syndrome doubled every 6.4 years, compared with 9.6 years for other intellectually disabled individuals.129 Life tables constructed by these authors indicated a life expectancy of 55 years for a 1‐year‐old patient with Down syndrome and mild/moderate developmental delay and a life expectancy of 43 years for a 1‐year‐old patient with Down syndrome more profoundly affected.

Graphs depict the median age at death of people with Down syndrome by sex (upper), by racial group (middle), and with or without congenital heart defects (CHD) by racial group (lower).

      Source: Yang et al. 2002.131 Reproduced with permission of Elsevier.

      A 2009 Australian study found an overall survival figure for Down syndrome of 90 percent to at least 5 years of age.132 The known comorbidities of Down syndrome116, 133149 and earlier onset Alzheimer disease133 cast a longer shadow. In individuals with Down syndrome over 40 years of age, increasing neuropsychological dysfunction and loss of adaptive skills have been noted.149 Between 50 and 70 percent develop Alzheimer disease by 60 years of age,139 and up to 84 percent of those with dementia develop seizures.136 People with Down syndrome who are APOEε4 carriers and/or have multiple comorbid disorders are at an increased risk of both dementia and death.150 A French study between 1979 and 1999 found a sixfold decreased risk of death from urological cancer in those with Down syndrome.146 People with Down syndrome have an overall decreased incidence of solid tumors.151


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Librs.Net
Defect or complication Prevalence (percent)
Neurologic
Intellectual disability 100
Hypotonia 100
Alzheimer disease and dementia 68–80
Sleep disorders 65
Autism 7–16