Title: Fetal Alcohol Syndrome
1Fetal Alcohol Syndrome
- Fetal alcohol syndrome is among the most commonly
known causes of mental retardation and is a major
public health problem. What is it, how does it
affect people, what can we do about it? These are
the issues that will be discussed in this
lecture.
2Historical view of alcohol as a teratogen
- Foolish, drunken, or harebrain women most often
bring forth children like unto themselves
Aristotle in
Problemata - Behold, thou shalt conceive and bear a son And
now, drink no wine or strong drink. - Judges 137
Rosett, 1984
3Drug Dependence Chronic Illness(not acute
illness or a moral failing)
- Genetic heritability, personal choice, and
environmental factors are comparably involved in
etiology and course - Drug dependence produces significant and
long-term changes in organ pathophysiology - Effective treatments (education, counseling,
medication) are available (and often
underutilized) - Medication adherence and relapse risks are
similar - (McLellan AT, et. al. JAMA 20002841689-1695)
4Fetal Alcohol Syndrome
- Specific pattern of facial features
- Pre- and/or postnatal growth deficiency
- Evidence of central nervous system dysfunction
Photo
courtesy of Teresa Kellerman
5FAS Only the tip of the iceberg
- Fetal alcohol syndrome
- Fetal alcohol effects
- Clinical suspect but appear normal
- Normal, but never reach their potential
Adaped from Streissguth
6Incidence of FAS (rates per 1000)
- Alaska 0.2 non AI/AN
- 3 AI/AN
- Aberdeen 2.7 AI/AN
- BDMP 0.7
- Atlanta 0.1
- 0.3 full partial
- IOM 0.6-3 IOM 2 - 8.5
AI/AN
- Seattle 2.8
- Cleveland 4.6
- Roubaix 1.3-4.8
- Seattle
- (FAS and ARND) 9.1
- South Africa (Wellington) 48
7Facies in Fetal Alcohol Syndrome
Streissguth, 1994
8Growing up with FAS
Courtesy of Ann Streissguth
9Brain damage resulting from prenatal alcohol
photo Clarren, 1986
10Change in brain size
Cerebrum
Cerebellum
Corpus Callosum
Mattson et al., 1994
11Corpus callosum abnormalities
Mattson, et al., 1994 Mattson Riley, 1995
Riley et al., 1995
12General Intellectual Performance
NC
PEA
FAS
Standard score
FSIQ
VIQ
PIQ
IQ scale
Mattson, S.N., 1997.
13Neuropsychological Performance
Mattson, et al., 1998
14Executive functioning deficits
Move only one piece at a time using one hand and
never place a big piece on top of a little piece
1
3
2
Starting position
Ending position
Mattson, et al., 1999
15Secondary Disabilities
- Individuals with FAS/FAE have a range of
secondary - disabilities disabilities that the individual
is not born with, and - which could be ameliorated with appropriate
interventions.
Streissguth, et al., 1996
16Animal models and prenatal alcohol
Many studies simply could not be done on humans
Confounding factors can rarely be controlled in
human studies Alcohol is rarely the only drug
used Many abnormalities occur at low
rates Epidemiological studies are extremely time
consuming and expensive
17Animal models Example of the comparability of
effects
- Growth retardation
- Facial characteristics
- Heart, skeletal defects
- Microcephaly
- Reductions in basal ganglia and cerebellar
volumes - Callosal anomalies
- Hyperactivity, attentional problems
- Inhibitory deficits
- Impaired learning
- Perseveration errors
- Feeding difficulties
- Gait anomalies
- Hearing anomalies
Driscoll, et al., 1990 Samson, 1986
18Facial features of FAS in the mouse
Adapted from Sulik Johnston, 1982
19Alcohol and the Cerebellum
Pictures courtesy of James West
20Possible mechanisms for alcohols effects
- Impaired progression through cell cycle
- Impaired glia development - migration,
neurotropic factor production, myelination - Impaired cell adhesion
- Alterations in cell membranes
- Altered production of or responsiveness to factor
that regulate growth, cell division, or cell
survival - Altered regulation of intracellular calcium
- Increased production of free radicals
21Courtesy of Michael Charness from Ramanathan et
al., 1996
22Risk Factors
- Dose of alcohol
- Pattern of exposure - binge vs chronic
- Developmental timing of exposure
- Genetic variation
- Maternal characteristics
- Synergistic reactions with other drugs
- Interaction with nutritional variables
23Drinking Prevalence in Pregnancy
- 12.8 of women continue to drink in pregnancy
(2.7 binge and 3.3 heavy) based upon a 1999
survey - Increased since 1991, (1 binge and heavy
combined) - 45 reported consuming alcohol during the 3
months before they found out they were pregnant - 60 of those didnt find out they were pregnant
until after their 4th week of gestation - (MMWR 200251C13273-6/Floyd, et. al. AJPM
199917101-7)
24Knowledge Deficits
- Surveys document knowledge, attitude, and belief
deficits in many populations, for example, among
African-American women in St. Louis - 12 think there is a safe level of alcohol
consumption - 36 think it is OK to drink at certain times
during pregnancy - 31 feel the effects of alcohol are treatable
- 54.9 feel sure they know when they are pregnant
- 12.3 feel that sexually active women who are at
risk for pregnancy can drink - (RDD Survey of African American Women in St.
Louis)
25Physician Deficits
- Physician deficits contribute
- Women rely on their physician for advice
- In a survey of obstetricians
- 50 believed there was a safe level
- 90 asked, but many barriers to follow-up
- Only 50 educated all patients about alcohol
- Only ¼ of OB text books state that there is no
safe level for EtOH consumption during pregnancy - (Dickman et. al. Am J OB GYN 200095756-763)
26Prevention
- Knowledge improves outcomes in intervention
studies - In a brief intervention study of chronic drinkers
of pregnant women, those who knew about the
relationship between alcohol use and FAS and gave
that as a reason for not drinking, reduced their
alcohol consumption more than those women who did
not. - (Chang et. al. JSAT 200018365-9)
27Dose Response I
28Dose Response II
- Regression for Aggression Delinquency
29Screening for Alcohol Use Among Pregnant Women-
Physician Barriers
- Physician communication skills
- Physician lack of knowledge and skill regarding
evaluation and treatment - Physicians feeling alcohol use in their
populations is not prevalent - Patients not willing to disclose alcohol use
30Screening Among Pregnant Women
- Traditional tools insensitive
- Laboratory tests not reliable
- Three questions
- Have you ever drank alcohol?
- How much alcohol did you drink in the month
before pregnancy? - How many cigarettes did you smoke in the month
before pregnancy?
31Screening Among Pregnant Women
- Three risk groups
- Low risk (lt2 / no alcohol use reported)
- Average risk (6 / used alcohol in past, not
smoked gt 3 cigarettes or drank in the month
before) - High risk (30 / used alcohol in past and smoked
gt 3 cigarettes or drank in the month before)
32Treatment Intervention
- Brief intervention in the primary care setting
- Standard Alcoholism Treatment for the Mom
- AA
- Counseling (outpatient or inpatient)
- Aggressive inpatient treatment
- Medication
- Intensive case-management for the children
- Animal and human data indicates that early
intervention in children with FAS on
environmental variables might have a beneficial
effect
33Prevention
- Very little research done on prevention
- Warning labels may not be reaching the women most
likely to have a child with FAS - On-going research
- Clinical interventions
- Community-based interventions
34Remediation of prenatal alcohol effects
Number of slips
Klintsova AY., 1998
35Case Management The Birth to 3 Program
- Parent-child assistance program
- Intensive home visitation model for the highest
risk mothers - Paraprofessional Advocates
- Paired with client for 3 years following the
birth of the target Baby - Link clients with community services
- Extensively trained and closely supervised
- Maximum caseload of 15
- Outcomes
- Fewer alcohol/drug affected children
- Reduced foster care placement
- Reduced dependence on welfare
Grant, T.M., 1999 Ernst, C. C., et al. 1999
36Summary
- Fetal Alcohol Syndrome is a devastating
developmental disorder that affects children born
to women who abuse alcohol during pregnancy. - Although FAS is entirely preventable, and in
spite of our increasing knowledge about the
effects of prenatal alcohol exposure, children
continue to be born exposed to high amounts of
alcohol. - Its consequences affect the individual, the
family, and society. - Its costs are tremendous, both personally and
financially. - Effective treatment and prevention strategies
must be developed and made available.