The Metropolitan Atlanta Congenital Defects Program: 35 years of birth defects surveillance at the centers for disease control and prevention
- 26 September 2003
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in Birth Defects Research Part A: Clinical and Molecular Teratology
- Vol. 67 (9) , 617-624
- https://doi.org/10.1002/bdra.10111
Abstract
BACKGROUND The Metropolitan Atlanta Congenital Defects Program (MACDP) is a population‐based birth defects surveillance program administered by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) that has been collecting, analyzing, and interpreting birth defects surveillance data since 1967. This paper presents an overview of MACDP current methods and accomplishments over the past 35 years. METHODS MACDP actively monitors major birth defects among infants born to residents of five counties of metropolitan Atlanta, an area with approximately 50,000 annual births. Cases are ascertained from multiple sources, coded using a modified British Pediatric Association six‐digit code, and reviewed and classified by clinical geneticists. RESULTS MACDP has monitored trends in birth defects rates and has served as a case registry for descriptive, risk factor, and prognostic studies of birth defects, including studies of Agent Orange exposure among Vietnam War veterans, maternal use of multivitamins, diabetes, febrile illnesses, and survival of children with neural tube defects. MACDP has served as a data source for one of the centers participating in the National Birth Defects Prevention Study, and for developing and evaluating neural tube defects prevention strategies related to the periconceptional use of folic acid supplements. CONCLUSIONS Since its inception, MACDP has served as a resource for the development of uniform methods and approaches to birth defect surveillance across the United States and in many other countries, monitoring birth defects rates, and as a case registry for various descriptive, etiologic, and survival studies of birth defects. MACDP has also served as a training ground for a large number of professionals active in birth defects epidemiology. Birth Defects Research (Part A) 67:617–624, 2003. Published 2003 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.Keywords
This publication has 52 references indexed in Scilit:
- Prevalence of spina bifida and anencephaly during the transition to mandatory folic acid fortification in the United StatesTeratology, 2002
- Folic Acid Supplementation and Risk for Imperforate Anus in ChinaAmerican Journal of Epidemiology, 2001
- Prevention of Neural-Tube Defects with Folic Acid in ChinaNew England Journal of Medicine, 1999
- Does Periconceptional Multivitamin Use Reduce the Risk for Limb Deficiency in Offspring?Epidemiology, 1997
- Counted Data CUSUM'sTechnometrics, 1985
- Errors of morphogenesis: Concepts and termsThe Journal of Pediatrics, 1982
- Maternal fever and neural tube defectsTeratology, 1980
- The frequency and financial burden of genetic disease in a pediatric hospitalAmerican Journal of Medical Genetics, 1978
- ASSOCIATION BETWEEN CLEFT LIP WITH OR WITHOUT CLEFT PALATE AND PRENATAL EXPOSURE TO DIAZEPAMThe Lancet, 1975
- POSSIBLE TERATOGENICITY OF TRICYCLIC ANTIDEPRESSANTSThe Lancet, 1972