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Vanishing twins, spared cohorts, and the birthweight of periviable infants born to Black and white women in the United States.

Authors :
Catalano, Ralph
Catalano, Ralph
Stolte, Allison
Casey, Joan
Gemmill, Alison
Lee, Hedwig
Bustos, Brenda
Bruckner, Tim
Catalano, Ralph
Catalano, Ralph
Stolte, Allison
Casey, Joan
Gemmill, Alison
Lee, Hedwig
Bustos, Brenda
Bruckner, Tim
Source :
Science Advances; vol 10, iss 36
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Pregnancies ending before 26 weeks contribute 1% of births but 40% of infant deaths in the United States. The rate of these periviable births to non-Hispanic (NH) Black women exceeds four times that for NH whites. Small male periviable infants remain most likely to die. NH white periviable males weigh more than their NH Black counterparts. We argue that male infants born from twin gestations, in which one fetus died in utero (i.e., the vanishing twin syndrome), contribute to the disparity. We cannot directly test our argument because vanishing typically occurs before clinical recognition of pregnancy. We, however, describe and find associations that would emerge in vital statistics were our argument correct. Among male periviable singleton births from 288 monthly conception cohorts (January 1995 through December 2018), we found an average NH white advantage of 30 grams (759 grams versus 729 grams). Consistent with our argument, however, cohorts signaling relatively few survivors of the vanishing twin syndrome showed no disparity.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
Science Advances; vol 10, iss 36
Notes :
application/pdf, Science Advances vol 10, iss 36
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1464619388
Document Type :
Electronic Resource