Nonsyndromic Craniosynostosis Correlation Between Ethnicity, Race, and Pattern of Affected Suture Type: Meta-Analysis

Author:

Benaroch David12,Brozynski Martina1,Seyidova Nargiz1,Oleru Olachi1,Agandi Lorreen13,Abu El Hawa Areeg A.1,Taub Peter J.1

Affiliation:

1. Division of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery, Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, New York, NY

2. American Medical Program at Tel Aviv University, New York, NY

3. Touro College of Osteopathic Medicine, New York, NY

Abstract

Background: Previous studies have sought to analyze risk factors associated with craniosynostosis and while syndromic craniosynostosis is often linked to genetic mutations, the factors impacting nonsyndromic cases are less investigated. The aim of current meta-analysis is to evaluate the relationship between ethnicity and suture type in nonsyndromic craniosynostosis patients. Methods: The search term “craniosynostosis [Title/Abstract] AND (race [Title/Abstract] OR ethnicity [Title/Abstract])) NOT (syndrome [Title/Abstract])” was used to search the PubMed, Cochrane, and MEDLINE databases. Analyses were conducted separately for each racial and ethnic group for each suture type cohort. Odds ratios were conducted for each suture cohort and confounders were adjusted using linear mixed-effect models. Because of the homogeneity of the populations and categorical nature of the classification, binary logistic regression was run on aggregate data. Results: The literature search yielded 165 articles. After reviewing titles, abstracts, and manuscript contents of these articles, 5 studies were ultimately included in a meta-analysis. Studies with missing data for a particular cohort or variable were excluded from the respective analysis. Hispanic children had higher odds of sagittal suture involvement (OR: 1.53, P<0.001), whereas Asian had coronal suture (OR: 2.47, P<0.001). Both Asian and African American children had significantly lower odds of sagittal suture involvement (OR: 0.50, P<0.001 and OR: 0.7, P=0.04, respectively). Conclusion The relationship between ethnicity and craniosynostosis has been suggested as a risk factor, but without definitive conclusion. Present meta-analysis findings demonstrated association between ethnicity and suture type, however further research with larger scale and geographically varied data is warranted.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

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