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Congenital anomaly surveillance in England-ascertainment deficiencies in the national system

Congenital anomaly surveillance in England-ascertainment deficiencies in the national system
Congenital anomaly surveillance in England-ascertainment deficiencies in the national system
Objective Firstly, to assess the completeness of ascertainment in the National Congenital Anomaly System (NCAS), the basis for congenital anomaly surveillance in England and Wales, and its variation by defect, geographical area, and socioeconomic deprivation. Secondly, to assess the impact of the lack of data on pregnancies terminated because of fetal anomaly.
Design Comparison of the NCAS with four local congenital anomaly registers in England.
Setting Four regions in England covering some 109 000 annual births.
Participants Cases of congenital anomalies registered in the NCAS (live births and stillbirths) and independently registered in the four local registers (live births, stillbirths, fetal losses from 20 weeks' gestation, and pregnancies terminated after prenatal diagnosis of fetal anomaly).
Main outcome measure The ratio of cases identified by the national register to those in local registry files, calculated for different specified anomalies, for whole registry areas, and for hospital catchment areas within registry boundaries.
Results Ascertainment by the NCAS (compared with data from local registers, from which terminations of pregnancy were removed) was 40% (34% for chromosomal anomalies and 42% for non-chromosomal anomalies) and varied markedly by defect, by local register, and by hospital catchment area, but not by area deprivation. When terminations of pregnancy were included in the register data, ascertainment by NCAS was 27% (19% for chromosomal anomalies and 31% for non-chromosomal anomalies), and the geographical variation was of a similar magnitude.
Conclusion The surveillance of congenital anomalies in England is currently inadequate because ascertainment to the national register is low and non-uniform and because no data exist on termination of pregnancy resulting from prenatal diagnosis of fetal anomaly.
0959-8138
1-5
Boyd, P.A.
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Armstrong, B.
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Dolk, H.
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Botting, B.
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Pattenden, S.
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Abramsky, L.
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Rankin, J.
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Vrijheid, M.
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Wellesley, D.
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Boyd, P.A.
c4a4a942-067b-43e8-9fa1-1a08406a8408
Armstrong, B.
0e5e3eb2-2ebc-45d5-8222-24d388a94876
Dolk, H.
74d140fa-b30c-4e14-9ac5-0897504bfad7
Botting, B.
42b16415-4f7d-4afd-bf68-1de1afcb9212
Pattenden, S.
feeeba34-e977-4fb8-a0a5-3e3375c54280
Abramsky, L.
d152009f-196f-4c84-8ab5-dad358d4e2fb
Rankin, J.
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Vrijheid, M.
1a2d6bc3-548e-422c-a10c-72caa0f6732e
Wellesley, D.
17cbd6c1-0efb-4df1-ae05-64a44987c9c0

Boyd, P.A., Armstrong, B., Dolk, H., Botting, B., Pattenden, S., Abramsky, L., Rankin, J., Vrijheid, M. and Wellesley, D. (2005) Congenital anomaly surveillance in England-ascertainment deficiencies in the national system. BMJ, 330 (7481), 1-5. (doi:10.1136/bmj.38300.665301.3A).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Objective Firstly, to assess the completeness of ascertainment in the National Congenital Anomaly System (NCAS), the basis for congenital anomaly surveillance in England and Wales, and its variation by defect, geographical area, and socioeconomic deprivation. Secondly, to assess the impact of the lack of data on pregnancies terminated because of fetal anomaly.
Design Comparison of the NCAS with four local congenital anomaly registers in England.
Setting Four regions in England covering some 109 000 annual births.
Participants Cases of congenital anomalies registered in the NCAS (live births and stillbirths) and independently registered in the four local registers (live births, stillbirths, fetal losses from 20 weeks' gestation, and pregnancies terminated after prenatal diagnosis of fetal anomaly).
Main outcome measure The ratio of cases identified by the national register to those in local registry files, calculated for different specified anomalies, for whole registry areas, and for hospital catchment areas within registry boundaries.
Results Ascertainment by the NCAS (compared with data from local registers, from which terminations of pregnancy were removed) was 40% (34% for chromosomal anomalies and 42% for non-chromosomal anomalies) and varied markedly by defect, by local register, and by hospital catchment area, but not by area deprivation. When terminations of pregnancy were included in the register data, ascertainment by NCAS was 27% (19% for chromosomal anomalies and 31% for non-chromosomal anomalies), and the geographical variation was of a similar magnitude.
Conclusion The surveillance of congenital anomalies in England is currently inadequate because ascertainment to the national register is low and non-uniform and because no data exist on termination of pregnancy resulting from prenatal diagnosis of fetal anomaly.

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Published date: 2005
Additional Information: Information in Practice

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 24635
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/24635
ISSN: 0959-8138
PURE UUID: be3a17d7-c5ce-4fe4-9390-56833b50168e

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Date deposited: 04 Apr 2006
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 06:57

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Contributors

Author: P.A. Boyd
Author: B. Armstrong
Author: H. Dolk
Author: B. Botting
Author: S. Pattenden
Author: L. Abramsky
Author: J. Rankin
Author: M. Vrijheid
Author: D. Wellesley

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