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Vanishing twins, selection in utero, and infant mortality in the United States.

Publication ,  Journal Article
Catalano, R; Casey, J; Stolte, A; Lee, H; Gemmill, A; Bustos, B; Bruckner, T
Published in: Evolution, medicine, and public health
January 2025

Research to identify fetal predictors of infant mortality among singletons born in the United States (US) concludes that poorly understood and unmeasured "confounders" produce a spurious association between fetal size and infant death. We argue that these confounders include Vanishing Twin Syndrome (VTS)-the clinical manifestation of selection against frail male twins in utero. We test our argument in 276 monthly conception cohorts conceived in the US from January 1995 through December 2017.We use Box-Jenkins transfer function modeling to test the hypothesis that among infants born from 276 monthly conception cohorts conceived in the US from January 1995 through December 2017, the sex ratio of twins born in the 37th week of gestation will correlate inversely with infant mortality among singleton males born at the 40th week of gestation.We find support for our hypothesis and infer that the contribution of survivors of VTS to temporal variation in infant mortality among the hardiest of singleton male infants, those born at 40 weeks gestation, ranged from a decrease of about 7% to an increase of about 5% over our 276 monthly conception cohorts.We conclude that an evolutionary perspective on fetal loss makes a heretofore "unmeasured confounder" of the relationship between fetal size and infant mortality both explicable and measurable. This finding may help clinicians better anticipate changes over time in the incidence of infant mortality.

Duke Scholars

Published In

Evolution, medicine, and public health

DOI

EISSN

2050-6201

ISSN

2050-6201

Publication Date

January 2025

Volume

13

Issue

1

Start / End Page

5 / 13

Related Subject Headings

  • 4206 Public health
  • 3104 Evolutionary biology
 

Citation

APA
Chicago
ICMJE
MLA
NLM
Catalano, R., Casey, J., Stolte, A., Lee, H., Gemmill, A., Bustos, B., & Bruckner, T. (2025). Vanishing twins, selection in utero, and infant mortality in the United States. Evolution, Medicine, and Public Health, 13(1), 5–13. https://doi.org/10.1093/emph/eoae035
Catalano, Ralph, Joan Casey, Allison Stolte, Hedwig Lee, Alison Gemmill, Brenda Bustos, and Tim Bruckner. “Vanishing twins, selection in utero, and infant mortality in the United States.Evolution, Medicine, and Public Health 13, no. 1 (January 2025): 5–13. https://doi.org/10.1093/emph/eoae035.
Catalano R, Casey J, Stolte A, Lee H, Gemmill A, Bustos B, et al. Vanishing twins, selection in utero, and infant mortality in the United States. Evolution, medicine, and public health. 2025 Jan;13(1):5–13.
Catalano, Ralph, et al. “Vanishing twins, selection in utero, and infant mortality in the United States.Evolution, Medicine, and Public Health, vol. 13, no. 1, Jan. 2025, pp. 5–13. Epmc, doi:10.1093/emph/eoae035.
Catalano R, Casey J, Stolte A, Lee H, Gemmill A, Bustos B, Bruckner T. Vanishing twins, selection in utero, and infant mortality in the United States. Evolution, medicine, and public health. 2025 Jan;13(1):5–13.
Journal cover image

Published In

Evolution, medicine, and public health

DOI

EISSN

2050-6201

ISSN

2050-6201

Publication Date

January 2025

Volume

13

Issue

1

Start / End Page

5 / 13

Related Subject Headings

  • 4206 Public health
  • 3104 Evolutionary biology