Premature
births lower
in women taking folic acid
WASHINGTON — Women who take folic acid
supplements for at least a year before becoming pregnant can
greatly reduce their risk of delivering a baby prematurely,
researchers said on Thursday.
Folic acid, a B vitamin, already is known to prevent major
birth defects that involve a baby’s brain or spine.
This study shows it may provide another benefit – cutting
down on premature births in which babies have less time to develop in the womb
and are more likely to experience serious medical problems. The study tracked
about 35,000 pregnant women between 1999 and 2002 who disclosed their folic acid
intake.
It found that women who took folic acid supplements for at
least a year before pregnancy cut their chances for very early pre-term births –
20 to 28 weeks into the pregnancy – by 70 percent compared to other women.
These very early pre-term babies in particular face a high
risk of complications such as cerebral palsy, mental retardation, chronic lung
disease and blindness.
Women taking folic acid for at least a year before getting
pregnant saw their risk fall by about 50 percent for premature births occurring
28 to 32 weeks into the pregnancy.
Most pregnancies take about 40 weeks. A premature birth is
one that occurs more than three weeks before the due date.
"We have a very exciting and promising potential prevention
method for pre-term birth," Dr. Radek Bukowski of the University of Texas
Medical Branch at Galveston, who led the study, said in a telephone interview.
"It’s exciting not the least because it’s a very simple thing
that’s very easy to be implemented, and it has a very powerful effect," added
Bukowski. The findings were presented at a meeting of the Society for
Maternal-Fetal Medicine in Dallas.
Folic acid helps the body make healthy new cells. It is
important for women to get enough of it before and during a pregnancy to prevent
major birth defects called neural tube defects including spina bifida and
anencephaly, experts say.
Leafy green vegetables, fruits, dried beans, peas and nuts
are some of the foods that contain folic acid. Enriched breads, cereals and
other grain products also have it. Folic acid can be taken as a dietary
supplement, for example in a multivitamin.
Taking it for less than a year before pregnancy provided
lesser protection from pre-term births, Bukowski said. The March of Dimes, an
advocacy group that works to prevent birth defects, premature births and infant
mortality, called the findings important.
"I think it’s promising and I think there should be some confirmational
studies," Janis Biermann of the March of Dimes said in an interview. "If it
holds true, it supports a message that we’ve been promoting for many years –
that it’s important for women of child-bearing age to take folic acid every day
as part of a healthy diet." – Reuters