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Tone Irene Nordtveit, PhD student1, Kari Klungsoyr Melve, associate professor1,2, Susanne Albrechtsen, obstetrician3, Rolv Skjaerven, professor1,2
1 Section for Epidemiology and Medical Statistics, Department of Public Health and Primary Health Care, University of Bergen, Postbox 7804, N-5020 Bergen, Norway, 2 Medical Birth Registry, Norwegian Institute of Public Health, Norway, 3 Department of Obstetrics and Gynaecology, Haukeland University Hospital, N-5021 Bergen, Norway
Correspondence to: Tone Irene Nordtveit Tone.Nordtveit{at}isf.uib.no
Design Population based cohort study for two generations.
Setting Data from the medical birth registry of Norway, based on all births in Norway 1967-2004 (2.2 million births).
Participants Generational data were provided through linkage by national identification numbers, forming 451 393 mother-offspring units and 295 253 father-offspring units. We included units where both parents and offspring were singletons and offspring were first born, forming 232 704 mother-offspring units and 154 851 father-offspring units for our analyses.
Main outcome measure Breech delivery in the second generation.
Results Men and women who themselves were delivered in breech presentation had more than twice the risk of breech delivery in their own first pregnancies compared with men and women who had been cephalic presentations (odds ratios 2.2, 95% confidence interval 1.8 to 2.7, and 2.2, 1.9 to 2.5, for men and women, respectively). The strongest risks of recurrence were found for vaginally delivered offspring and were equally strong for men and women. Increased risk of recurrence of breech delivery in offspring was present only for parents delivered at term.
Conclusion Intergenerational recurrence risk of breech delivery in offspring was equally high when transmitted through fathers and mothers. It seems reasonable to attribute the observed pattern of familial predisposition to term breech delivery to genetic inheritance, predominantly through the fetus.
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