학술논문

Validation of a new biomarker of fetal exposure to alcohol
Document Type
Academic Journal
Source
The Journal of Pediatrics. Oct 01, 2003 143(4):463-469
Subject
Language
English
ISSN
0022-3476
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To test the sensitivity and specificity of fatty acid ethyl esters (FAEEs) extracted from meconium to identify alcohol-using pregnant women with a sensitive and specific methodology, gas chromatography-tandem mass spectroscopy (GC/MS/MS). STUDY DESIGN: Twenty-seven samples of meconium were obtained from infants from the mixed race community in Cape Town, South Africa, who were enrolled in a longitudinal neurobehavioral study. Maternal alcohol use was reported prospectively during pregnancy. FAEEs were isolated from meconium and quantitated by GC/MS/MS. RESULTS: Ethyl oleate was the FAEE that correlated most strongly with maternal self-reported drinking, especially with the average ounces of absolute alcohol ingested per drinking day. Ethyl oleate was most strongly related to drinking in the second and third trimesters (Pearson r = .55 and .40, respectively). At a threshold of 1.5 average ounces of absolute alcohol ingested per drinking day, the area under the receiving operator characteristic curve was .92 (95% confidence interval, 0.74–0.97). Using a cut-off value of 32 ng/g, sensitivity was 84.2% and specificity was 83.3%. CONCLUSIONS: Ethyl oleate concentration in meconium assayed by GC/MS/MS provides a highly sensitive and specific indicator of maternal alcohol use during pregnancy.