4.0 Article

Hypospadias, Intrauterine Growth Restriction, and Abnormalities of the Placenta

Journal

BIRTH DEFECTS RESEARCH
Volume 110, Issue 2, Pages 122-127

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/bdr2.1087

Keywords

hypospadias; intrauterine growth restriction; placental abnormalities; vascular malperfusion; masculinization

Funding

  1. Birth Defects Registry of the Massachusetts Department of Public Health, is part of the National Birth Defects Prevention Study, a project of Birth Defects and Developmental Disabilities of the Centers for Disease Control, Atlanta

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BackgroundHypospadias is more common among male infants with growth restriction, defined as a birth weight less than the 10(th) centile, than in infants with a normal birth weight. Intrauterine growth retardation (IUGR) has been associated, also, with abnormalities of the placenta, such as maternal vascular malperfusion. In a consecutive sample of newborn infants, the association between hypospadias, IUGR and abnormalities of the placenta could be analyzed. MethodsAffected infants were identified among 289,365 liveborn and stillborn infants in the Active Malformations Surveillance Program between 1972 and 2012. The four anatomic locations of the ectopic urethral opening, based on the recorded physical examination findings, were: (1) glandular; (2) subcoronal; (3) penile; (4) penoscrotal. Affected infants with associated malformations, a chromosome abnormality, teratogenic exposure, maternal diabetes mellitus, or multiple gestations were excluded. ResultsThree hundred sixteen affected infants were identified: 52.2% glandular, 11.7% subcoronal, 27.8% penile, and 8.2% penoscrotal. The highest frequency of IUGR (34.6%) was in the infants with the most severe hypospadias (penoscrotal). The 39 reports of placenta findings showed a high frequency of abnormalities. ConclusionAn increased rate of occurrence of hypospadias and abnormalities of the placenta were present in infants with intrauterine growth restriction. The postulated cause of this association is a deficiency in the function of the placenta during weeks 10 to 14 of gestation when normal masculinization occurs due to an increase in the level of placental human chorionic gonadotropin and fetal testosterone. The cause of the placental deficiency has not been established. Birth Defects Research 110:122-127, 2018.(c) 2017 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.

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