Estimation of national, regional, and global prevalence of alcohol use during pregnancy and fetal alcohol syndrome: a systematic review and meta-analysis
University of Toronto · Centre for Addiction and Mental Health · +3 more institutions
Abstract
Alcohol use during pregnancy is the direct cause of fetal alcohol syndrome (FAS). We aimed to estimate the prevalence of alcohol use during pregnancy and FAS in the general population and, by linking these two indicators, estimate the number of pregnant women that consumed alcohol during pregnancy per one case of FAS.
We began by doing two independent comprehensive systematic literature searches using multiple electronic databases for original quantitative studies that reported the prevalence in the general population of the respective country of alcohol use during pregnancy published from Jan 1, 1984, to June 30, 2014, or the prevalence of FAS published from Nov 1, 1973, to June 30, 2015, in a peer-reviewed journal or scholarly report. Each study on the prevalence of alcohol use during pregnancy was critically appraised using a checklist for observational studies, and each study on the prevalence of FAS was critically appraised by use of a method specifically designed for systematic reviews addressing questions of prevalence. Studies on the prevalence of alcohol use during pregnancy and/or FAS were omitted if they used a sample population not generalisable to the general population of the respective country, reported a pooled estimate by combining several studies, or were published in iteration. Studies that excluded abstainers were also omitted for the prevalence of alcohol use during pregnancy. We then did country-specific random-effects meta-analyses to estimate the pooled prevalence of these indicators. For countries with one or no empirical studies, we predicted prevalence of alcohol use during pregnancy using fractional response regression modelling and prevalence of FAS using a quotient of the average number of women who consumed alcohol during pregnancy per one case of FAS. We used Monte Carlo simulations to derive confidence intervals for the country-specific point estimates of the prevalence of FAS. We estimated WHO regional and global averages of the prevalence of alcohol use during pregnancy and FAS, weighted by the number of livebirths per country. The review protocols for the prevalence of alcohol use during pregnancy (CRD42016033835) and FAS (CRD42016033837) are available on PROSPERO.
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 128.14
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 57
Authors
5- SPSvetlana PopovaCorresponding
University of Toronto, Centre for Addiction and Mental Health, Public Health Ontario
- SLShannon Lange
University of Toronto, Centre for Addiction and Mental Health
- CPCharlotte Probst
TU Dresden, Centre for Addiction and Mental Health
- GGGerrit Gmel
UNSW Sydney, Centre for Addiction and Mental Health
- JRJürgen Rehm
Public Health Ontario, TU Dresden, Centre for Addiction and Mental Health, University of Toronto
Topics & keywords
- Pregnancy
- Medicine
- Population
- Fetal alcohol syndrome
- Meta-analysis
- Checklist
- Systematic review
- Environmental health
- Good health and well-being