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Dive into the research topics where Cathy R. Wasserman is active.

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Featured researches published by Cathy R. Wasserman.


American Journal of Medical Genetics | 1998

Racial and ethnic variations in the prevalence of orofacial clefts in California, 1983-1992.

Lisa A. Croen; Gary M. Shaw; Cathy R. Wasserman; Marie M. Tolarova

To investigate variations in the prevalence of oral cleft anomalies according to parental race and ethnicity and maternal country of birth, the authors analyzed a cohort of 2,221,755 live births and fetal deaths delivered between 1983 and 1992 to residents of California. A total of 2,329 cleft lip with or without cleft palate (CL +/- P) cases and 1,475 cleft palate alone (CP) cases were identified by the California Birth Defects Monitoring Program, a population-based registry. Compared to Whites, the prevalence of CL +/- P was lower among African Americans (prevalence ratio (PR) = 0.56, 95% confidence interval (CI) = 0.45-0.69), higher among Native Americans (PR = 1.81, CI = 1.20-2.69), and the same among the Japanese (PR = 1.07, CI = 0.62-1.82) and Chinese (PR = 0.96, CI = 0.71-1.29). The risk of CL +/- P was slightly lower among the offspring of foreign-born Chinese women relative to U.S.-born Chinese women (PR = 0.71, CI = 0.33-1.57), and slightly higher among foreign-born Filipinos relative to their U.S.-born counterparts (PR = 1.37, CI = 0.57-3.53), although confidence intervals around these risk estimates were wide owing to sparse data. For CP, lower prevalences were observed among African Americans (PR = 0.72, CI = 0.58-0.91) and Hispanics (PR = 0.77, CI = 0.67-0.87) than among Whites. The risk of CP was higher among foreign-born Filipinos compared to U.S.-born Filipinos (PR = 1.52, CI = 0.58-4.33), although the confidence interval around this estimate included unity. These prevalence variations may reflect differences in both environmental and genetic factors affecting clefting risk.


American Journal of Public Health | 1998

Socioeconomic status, neighborhood social conditions, and neural tube defects.

Cathy R. Wasserman; Gary M. Shaw; Steve Selvin; Jeffrey B. Gould; S L Syme

OBJECTIVES This study evaluated the contributions of lower socioeconomic status (SES) and neighborhood socioeconomic characteristics to neural tube defect etiology. The influence of additional factors, including periconceptional multivitamin use and race/ethnicity, was also explored. METHODS Data derived from a case-control study of California pregnancies from 1989 to 1991. Mothers of 538 (87.8% of eligible) case infants/fetuses with neural tube defects and mothers of 539 (88.2%) nonmalformed infants were interviewed about their SES. Reported addresses were linked to 1990 US census information to characterize neighborhoods. RESULTS Twofold elevated risks were observed for several SES indicators. Risks were somewhat confounded by vitamin use, race/ethnicity, age, body mass index, and fever but remained elevated after adjustment. A risk gradient was seen with increasing number of lower SES indicators. Women with 1 to 3 and 4 to 6 lower SES indicators had adjusted odds ratios of 1.6 (1.1-2.2) and 3.2 (1.9-5.4), respectively, compared with women with no lower SES indicators. CONCLUSIONS Both lower SES and residence in a SES-lower neighborhood increased the risk of an neural tube defect-affected pregnancy, with risks increasing across a gradient of SES indicators.


American Journal of Medical Genetics | 1998

Lack of association between mutations in the folate receptor-α gene and spina bifida

Robert C. Barber; Gary M. Shaw; Edward J. Lammer; Kimberly A. Greer; Timothy A. Biela; Steven W. Lacey; Cathy R. Wasserman; Richard H. Finnell

Defects of neural tube closure are among the most common of all human malformations. Epidemiological and genetic studies indicate that most of these defects are multifactorial in origin with genetic and environmental causes. Although periconceptional supplementation of the maternal diet with folic acid has been shown to reduce the recurrence and occurrence of neural tube defects (NTDs) by up to 70%, the underlying mechanism remains unknown. Folic acid enters cells of certain tissues via a receptor-mediated process known as potocytosis. The folate receptor alpha (FR-alpha) gene codes for the protein responsible for binding folate, which is the first, and only, folate-dependent step in folate transport. The FR-alpha exons, which code for mature protein and the intron-exon boundaries, were examined for mutations in three separate studies. Initial screening was performed by single-stranded conformational polymorphism (SSCP) analysis in a subset of 1,688 samples obtained from a population-based case-control study of NTDs in California. In the second study, the DNA sequence of exons 5 and 6 was determined in a group of 50 NTD affected individuals. The final experiment involved using dideoxy fingerprinting (ddF) to screen a population-based case-control sample of 219 individuals who were stratified into four sub-groups on the basis of folate intake and pregnancy outcome. No polymorphism was detected in any of the four exons examined. It is unlikely that the beneficial effects of maternal folate supplementation in preventing NTDs acts through a mechanism involving pharmacological correction of a variant form of folate receptor alpha.


American Journal of Public Health | 1997

Risk for neural tube defect-affected pregnancies among women of Mexican descent and white women in California.

Gary M. Shaw; Ellen M. Velie; Cathy R. Wasserman

OBJECTIVES This study investigated a previously reported 50% or more increased risk for neural tube defect-affected pregnancies among Latina women compared with White women. METHODS Data were derived from a population-based case-control study of fetuses and live-born infants with neural tube defects in a 1989-through-1991 California birth cohort. Interviews were conducted with mothers of 538 (88% of eligible) infants/fetuses with neural tube defects and mothers of 539 (88%) nonmalformed control infants. RESULTS The risk for a neural tube defect-affected pregnancy was approximately twice as high among women of Mexican descent than among White women (odds ratio = 1.9, 95% confidence interval [CI] = 1.5, 2.8). The odds ratio for Mexico-born Mexican women compared with White women was 2.4 (95% CI = 1.7, 3.2), whereas the risk for US-born women of Mexican and other racial/ethnic descent was not substantially higher than that for Whites. The higher risk among Mexico-born Mexican women was not attributable to differences in numerous studied parental characteristics and exposures. CONCLUSIONS Given that nearly 20% of all California births are to Mexico-born Mexican women, the increased risks observed are relevant to the population burden of neural tube defects.


Teratology | 1999

Maternal periconceptional use of electric bed-heating devices and risk for neural tube defects and orofacial clefts.

Gary M. Shaw; Verne Nelson; Karen Todoroff; Cathy R. Wasserman; Raymond R. Neutra

Electric and magnetic fields are of concern as risk factors for adverse reproductive outcomes, including congenital anomalies. Among residential exposures to electric and magnetic fields, electric bed-heating devices such as electric blankets may be a substantial source of such exposures, and their use is fairly common. Two population-based case-control studies were analyzed to investigate whether the periconceptional use of electric blankets, bed warmers, or electrically heated waterbeds increased the risk of women to deliver infants or fetuses with neural tube defects (NTDs) or orofacial clefts. We obtained information on bed-heating devices from 538 NTD cases and their 539 controls in one study, and 265 NTD cases and 481 controls and 652 orofacial cleft cases and their 734 controls from another study. Our results revealed a few modestly elevated risks of certain anomaly phenotypes with maternal use of certain bed-heating devices, but risks tended to be imprecise. In general, women who reported more frequent use of a bed-heating device, or longer duration of use, did not appear to have a higher risk for delivering offspring with anomalies than were women who reported less frequent or shorter-duration use.


The Lancet | 1995

Risks of orofacial clefts in children born to women using multivitamins containing folic acid periconceptionally

Gary M. Shaw; Cathy R. Wasserman; Cynthia D. O'Malley; Marie M. Tolarova; EdwardJ. Lammer


American Journal of Medical Genetics | 1995

Maternal periconceptional use of multivitamins and reduced risk for conotruncal heart defects and limb deficiencies among offspring

Gary M. Shaw; Cynthia D. O'Malley; Cathy R. Wasserman; Marie M. Tolarova; Edward J. Lammer


American Journal of Human Genetics | 1996

Orofacial clefts, parental cigarette smoking, and transforming growth factor-alpha gene variants.

Gary M. Shaw; Cathy R. Wasserman; EdwardJ. Lammer; Cynthia D. O'Malley; Jeffrey C. Murray; Ann M. Basart; Marie M. Tolarova


Epidemiology | 1999

Maternal pesticide exposure from multiple sources and selected congenital anomalies.

Gary M. Shaw; Cathy R. Wasserman; Cynthia D. O'Malley; Verne Nelson; Richard J. Jackson


Teratology | 1994

Epidemiologic characteristics of phenotypically distinct neural tube defects among 0.7 Million California births, 1983–1987

Gary M. Shaw; Nancy G. Jensvold; Cathy R. Wasserman; Edward J. Lammer

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EdwardJ. Lammer

Children's Hospital Oakland

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