Lucas G. Gimenez
National Scientific and Technical Research Council
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Featured researches published by Lucas G. Gimenez.
Birth Defects Research Part A-clinical and Molecular Teratology | 2015
Monica Rittler; Hebe Campaña; Mónica Ermini; Juan Antonio Gili; Fernando A. Poletta; Mariela S. Pawluk; Lucas G. Gimenez; Viviana Cosentino; Eduardo E. Castilla; Jorge S. Lopez-Camelo
BACKGROUND Although young maternal age has been identified as a risk factor for gastroschisis, its role remains undisclosed. To our knowledge, the differences between young mothers of infants with gastroschisis and young mothers of infants with other pregnancy outcomes have not been established. The aim of this work was to compare characteristics of young mothers whose newborn had gastroschisis with same aged mothers of malformed and nonmalformed control infants, diagnosed within the ECLAMC maternity hospital network. METHODS Data base records of live and stillborn infants of one of three groups (with isolated gastroschisis, with 1 of 5 other isolated birth defects, and nonmalformed), and whose mothers were younger than 20 years, were selected. Secular trends were obtained for all birth defects; frequencies and odds ratios (OR) of demographic and reproductive variables were compared among the 3 groups. Significantly associated variables were adjusted with a multivariate regression. RESULTS The association was higher with gastroschisis 1) than with other birth defects for African ancestry, smoking, adequate prenatal control and diagnosis 2) than with nonmalformed controls for maternal illnesses and alcohol 3) and than both for previous pregnancy loss and medication, mainly sex hormones. After adjustment, only previous pregnancy loss maintained its significance when compared with malformed (OR = 2.34; 1.37-3.97; P = 0.002), as well as with nonmalformed (OR = 3.43; 2.07-5.66; P < 0.001) controls. CONCLUSION A previous pregnancy loss was identified as the main risk factor for gastroschisis, while an increased use of sex hormones, perhaps related to the previous loss, could trigger a disruptive mechanism, due to their thrombophilic effect.
Journal of Maternal-fetal & Neonatal Medicine | 2015
Lucas G. Gimenez; Hugo Krupitzki; Allison M. Momany; Juan Antonio Gili; Fernando A. Poletta; Hebe Campaña; Viviana Cosentino; Cesar Saleme; Mariela S. Pawluk; Jeffrey C. Murray; Eduardo E. Castilla; Enrique C. Gadow; Jorge S. Lopez-Camelo
Abstract Objective: This study was designed to characterize and compare the maternal and newborn epidemiological characteristics through analysis of environmental factors, sociodemographic characteristics and clinical characteristics between the different clinical subtypes of preterm birth (PTB): Idiopathic (PTB-I), premature rupture of the membranes (PTB-PPROM) and medically indicated (PTB-M). The two subtypes PTB-I and PTB-PPROM grouped are called spontaneous preterm births (PTB-S). Methods: A retrospective, observational study was conducted in 1.291 preterm nonmalformed singleton live-born children to nulliparous and multiparous mother’s in Tucumán-Argentina between 2005 and 2010. Over 50 maternal variables and 10 newborn variables were compared between the different clinical subtypes. The comparisons were done to identify heterogeneity between subtypes of preterm birth: (PTB-S) versus (PTB-M), and within spontaneous subtype: (PTB-I) versus (PTB-PPROM). In the same way, two conditional logistic multivariate regressions were used to compare the odds ratio (OR) between PTB-S and PTB-M, as well as PTB-I and PTB-PPROM. We matched for maternal age when comparing maternal variables and gestational age when comparing infant variables. Results: The PTB-I subtype was characterized by younger mothers of lower socio-economic status, PTB-PPROM was characterized by environmental factors resulting from inflammatory processes, and PTB-M was characterized by increased maternal or fetal risk pregnancies. Conclusions: The main risk factor for PTB-I and PTB-M was having had a prior preterm delivery; however, previous spontaneous abortion was not a risk factor, suggesting a reproductive selection mechanism.
Pediatric Research | 2016
Dinushan Kaluarachchi; Allison M. Momany; Tamara Busch; Lucas G. Gimenez; Cesar Saleme; Viviana Cosentino; Kaare Christensen; John M. Dagle; Kelli K. Ryckman; Jeffrey C. Murray
Background:Preterm birth (PTB) is a major cause of neonatal mortality and morbidity. There is strong evidence of genetic susceptibility. Objective of this study was to identify genetic variants contributing to PTB.Methods:Genotyping was performed for 24 single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in 4 candidate genes (NR5A2, FSHR, FOXP3, and SERPINH1). Genotyping was completed on 728 maternal triads (mother and maternal grandparents of a preterm infant). Data were analyzed with Family Based Association Test.Results:For all maternal triads rs2737667 of NR5A2 showed significant association at P = 0.02. When stratifying by gestational age three SNPs in NR5A2 had P values <0.05 in the <32-wk gestational age group (rs12131233, P = 0.007; rs2737667, P = 0.04; rs2816949, P = 0.02). When preterm premature rupture of membranes cases were excluded rs2737667 of NR5A2 showed the strongest association with a P value <0.0002. This association remained significant after correction for multiple testing.Conclusion:This study suggests a potential association between intronic SNPs in the NR5A2 gene and PTB. NR5A2 gene encodes for the liver receptor homolog-1 protein, which plays a critical role in regulation of cholesterol metabolism, steroidogenesis, and progesterone synthesis. These findings suggest that NR5A2 may be important in the pathophysiology of PTB and exploring noncoding regulators of NR5A2 is warranted.
Epidemiology | 2015
Juan Antonio Gili; Fernando A. Poletta; Mariela S. Pawluk; Lucas G. Gimenez; Hebe Campaña; Eduardo E. Castilla; Jorge S. Lopez-Camelo
© 2015 Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc. All rights reserved. www.epidem.com | e53 exists between confounding bias reduction and increased bias and variance due to nonpositivity.4 to investigate this trade-off weights were progressively truncated for each method, and as levels of weight truncation increased, the marginal structural model effect estimates became more similar to the estimate from ordinary adjustment for timevarying covariates (table). the detailed analysis is presented in the eAppendix (http://links.lww.com/eDe/A939). to assess the relation between weight truncation and confounder imbalance, the inverse probability weights were used to fit a weighted exposure model with the R2 expected to be approximately zero.5 to find the level of truncation leading to a minimal confounder imbalance (lowest R2), this analysis was repeated for different levels of weight truncation. the normal exposure model (before weighting) had a R2 of 0.51, while refitting this exposure model with untruncated weights resulted in an increased R2 of 0.54. this indicates that untruncated weights from the normal model increased confounder imbalance. For the normal inverse probability weighted model, the minimum imbalance was observed at 4% truncation (R2 = 0.124). this indicates that there is still an association between confounders and exposure after weighting which may be due to exposure model misspecification. Noting the level of imbalance estimated by the weighted exposure model only quantifies imbalance with respect to that particular specification and distributional form of the exposure model, methods to assess balance with respect to separate confounders could be used.6 Despite large differences in weight distributions between methods for obtaining inverse probability weighting for continuous exposures, different methods yielded similar exposure–outcome effect estimates. However, these results should be interpreted cautiously since large untruncated weights, and remaining imbalance after truncation, suggest that nonpositivity (possibly with respect to a combination of confounders) may invalidate estimates. ACKNOWLEDGMENTS The authors thank P. M. C. Klein Klouwenberg, MD, PharmD, and W. Pasma, DVM, Department of Intensive Care Medicine, University Medical Centre Utrecht, Utrecht, The Netherlands, for their support and assistance in data acquisition and data management.
PLOS ONE | 2018
Fernando A. Poletta; Monica Rittler; Cesar Saleme; Hebe Campaña; Juan Antonio Gili; Mariela S. Pawluk; Lucas G. Gimenez; Viviana Cosentino; Eduardo E. Castilla; Jorge S. Lopez-Camelo
Background Historically, neural tube defects (NTDs) have predominated in female infants but the reasons remain unclear. In South America, the pre- folic acid fortification (FAF) rates of NTDs were around 18/10,000 births for females and 12/10,000 births for males, with an estimated sex ratio (male/female) of 0.67. During the post- FAF period, unpublished routine reports have indicated changes in the sex ratio for these defects while some descriptive reports are controversial. To date and to our knowledge, however, no studies specifically focusing on these changes to test this hypothesis directly have been undertaken. The aim of this study was to analyze changes in the sex ratio of infants with NTDs after FAF in South American countries. Materials and methods With a descriptive cross-sectional study design, 2,597 infants with isolated NTDs born between 1990 and 2013 in 3 countries participating in the Latin American Collaborative Study of Congenital Malformations (ECLAMC) network were included: (Chile N = 521 and Argentina N = 1,619 [with FAF policies]; Venezuela N = 457 [without FAF policies; used as control]; total births = 2,229,561). The differences-in-differences method and Poisson regressions were used to evaluate the sex ratio shift from female to male before vs. after FAF, and to assess whether these differences were related to the fortification. Results and conclusions In Chile and Argentina the prevalence of NTDs, particularly anencephaly and cervico-thoracic spina bifida, showed a greater reduction rate in females than in males after FAF, resulting in a change of the sex ratio of infants with NTDs. Some mechanisms possibly involved in this differential reduction are proposed which might be useful to identify the pathogenesis of NTDs as a whole and specifically of those susceptible to the protective effect of folic acid.
International Journal of Public Health | 2017
George L. Wehby; Lucas G. Gimenez; Jorge S. Lopez-Camelo
ObjectivesThe purpose of this study is to examine the effects of economic cycles in Argentina on infant and maternal health between 1994 and 2006, a period that spans the major economic crisis in 1999–2002.MethodsWe evaluate the effects of province-level unemployment rates on several infant health outcomes, including birth weight, gestational age, fetal growth rate, and hospital discharge status after birth in a sample of 15,000 infants born in 13 provinces. Maternal health and healthcare outcomes include acute and chronic illnesses, infectious diseases, and use of prenatal visits and technology. Regression models control for hospital and year fixed effects and province-specific time trends.ResultsUnemployment rise reduces fetal growth rate particularly among high educated parents. Also, maternal poverty-related infectious diseases increase, although reporting of acute illnesses declines (an effect more pronounced among low educated parents). There is also some evidence for reduced access to prenatal care and technology among less educated parents with higher unemployment.ConclusionsUnemployment rise in Argentina has adversely affected certain infant and maternal health outcomes, but several measures show no evidence of significant change.
Birth Defects Research Part A-clinical and Molecular Teratology | 2016
Juan Antonio Gili; Fernando A. Poletta; Lucas G. Gimenez; Mariela S. Pawluk; Hebe Campaña; Eduardo E. Castilla; Jorge S. Lopez-Camelo
BACKGROUND The birth prevalence rate (BPR) of congenital anomalies (CAs) is heterogeneous and exhibits geographical and sociocultural variations throughout the world. In South America (SA), high birth prevalence regions of congenital anomalies have been observed. The aim of this study was to identify, describe, and characterize geographical clusters of congenital anomalies in SA. METHODS This observational descriptive study is based on clinical epidemiological data registered by the Latin-American Collaborative Study of Congenital Malformations network. Between 1995 and 2012, a total of 25,082 malformed newborns were ascertained from 2,557,424 births at 129 hospitals in SA. The spatial scan statistic was used to determine geographical regions with high BPR of CAs. The BPR was obtained with a Poisson regression model. Odds ratios were estimated for several risk factors inside the geographical clusters. RESULTS We confirmed the existence of high BPR regions of CAs in SA. Indicators of low socioeconomic conditions, such as a low maternal education, extreme age childbearing, infectious diseases, and medicine use during pregnancy were detected as risk factors inside these regions. Native and African ancestries with high frequency of consanguineous marriages could explain partially these high BPR clusters. CONCLUSION The recognition of clusters could be a starting point in the identification of susceptibility genes associated with the occurrence of CA in high BPR regions.
Journal of Community Genetics | 2017
Boris Groisman; Juan Antonio Gili; Lucas G. Gimenez; Fernando A. Poletta; María Paz Bidondo; Pablo Barbero; Rosa Liascovich; Jorge S. Lopez-Camelo
Geographical clusters are defined as the occurrence of an unusual number of cases higher than expected in a given geographical area in a certain period of time. The aim of this study was to identify potential geographical clusters of specific selected congenital anomalies (CA) in Argentina. The cases were ascertained from 703,325 births, examined in 133 maternity hospitals in the 24 provinces of Argentina. We used the spatial scan statistic to determine areas of Argentina which had statistically significant elevations of prevalence. Prenatal diagnosis followed by referral of high-risk pregnancies to high complexity hospitals in a hospital-based surveillance system can create artifactual clusters. We assessed the referral bias by evaluating the prevalence heterogeneity within each cluster. Eight clusters of selected CAs with unusually high birth prevalence were identified: anencephaly, encephalocele, spina bifida, diaphragmatic hernia, talipes equinovarus, omphalocele, Cleft lip with or without cleft palate (CL/P), and Down syndrome. The clusters of Down syndrome and CL/P observed in this study match the previously reported clusters. These findings support local targeted interventions to lower the prevalence of the CAs and/or further research on the cause of each cluster. The clusters of spina bifida, anencephaly, encephalocele, omphalocele, congenital diaphragmatic hernia, and talipes equinovarus may be influenced by prenatal diagnosis and referral to high complexity hospitals.
Birth defects research | 2017
Hebe Campaña; Monica Rittler; Juan Antonio Gili; Fernando A. Poletta; Mariela S. Pawluk; Lucas G. Gimenez; Viviana Cosentino; Eduardo E. Castilla; Jorge S. López Camelo
BACKGROUND Some studies, mainly in the older literature, observed a significant association between miscarriages and birth defects (BDs) occurring in the same sibship. However, few studies examined the BD/miscarriage relationship in depth. In addition nothing has been added to the underlying mechanisms possibly linking both events. The purpose of this work was to identify specific BDs associated with maternal miscarriages. In particular, it examined whether the risk depended on the number of losses, and to suggest the existence of specific factors for each BD/miscarriage association observed. METHODS The study relied on the Latin American Collaborative Study on Congenital Malformations (ECLAMC) database registries including 26,906 live and stillborn infants with one of 19 selected isolated BDs and 93,853 normal controls. Infants born to primigravid mothers were excluded from the present study. Demographic and reproductive variables were compared between control mothers With and Without previous miscarriages. The number, frequency, and distribution of miscarriages were observed for each BD and controls. A conditional logistic regression was applied to evaluate the miscarriage risk for each BD. RESULTS Control mothers with previous miscarriages were older, had had more pregnancies, and were less educated. Three risk patterns of miscarriages were observed: a very high risk of miscarriages associated with gastroschisis, omphalocele, and talipes; only one miscarriage associated with spina bifida, and two or more miscarriages associated with hypospadias. CONCLUSION These three patterns suggest that different factors underly each BD/miscarriage association: infertility for hypospadias, vascular disruption for gastroschisis and talipes, while for spina bifida, the much debated trophoblastic cell residue theory could not be discarded. Birth Defects Research 109:254-261, 2017.
American Journal of Human Biology | 2016
Rubén Bronberg; Juan Antonio Gili; Lucas G. Gimenez; José Edgardo Dipierri; Jorge S. López Camelo
To analyze potential biosocial factors in consanguineous unions according to the level of consanguinity and its spatial distribution in South America.