6533b833fe1ef96bd129b8f5
RESEARCH PRODUCT
Coffee and Smoking as Risk Factors of Twin Pregnancies: The Danish National Birth Cohort
Jørn OlsenKaare ChristensenBodil Hammer BechMaría Morales-suárez-varelasubject
AdultAlcohol DrinkingDenmarkTwinsMothersCoffeeBody Mass IndexCohort StudiesDanishPregnancyRisk FactorsTwins DizygoticHumansMedicineGenetics (clinical)PregnancySingletonbusiness.industrySmokingConfoundingObstetrics and GynecologyTwins Monozygoticmedicine.diseaseObesitylanguage.human_languageZygosityParityPediatrics Perinatology and Child HealthlanguageFemaleAlcohol intakePregnancy MultiplebusinessBirth cohortDemographydescription
AbstractTwinning rates have changed substantially over time for reasons that are only partly known. In this study we studied smoking, coffee and alcohol intake, and their possible interaction with obesity as potential determinants of twinning rates using data from the Danish National Birth Cohort between 1996 and 2002. We identified 82,985 pregnancies: 81,954 singleton and 1031 twins. For the twins we had data to classify 121 as monozygotic, 189 dizygotic (same sex), 313 dizygotic (opposite sex) but, 408 were of the same sex but with unknown zygosity. All mothers were interviewed about their prepregnancy weight and height, coffee and alcohol intake, smoking habits, and potential confounding factors at early stages of pregnancy. We identified smoking (> 10 cigarettes/day) as a possible determinant of twinning, particularly for dizygotic twinning rates (same sex) and furthermore corroborated that obesity and the mother's age are strong correlates of twinning. Others have found coffee intake to increase twinning rates but that is not seen in these data.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
---|---|---|---|---|
2007-01-01 | Twin Research and Human Genetics |