Self-Reported Tobacco Use and Correlation with Umbilical Cord Blood Cotinine levels at Delivery among Appalachian Gravidas

The detrimental effects of cigarette use during pregnancy are well documented. Studies have shown that cigarette smoking while pregnant is associated with multiple adverse outcomes including: pre-term birth, placental abruption, placenta previa, fetal growth restriction, stillbirth, increased rate o...

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Main Authors: Jesse Cottrell, Brenda L. Mitchell, Pooja N. Sangani, D'Andrea S. Thomas, Monica A. Valentovic
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Marshall University 2017-01-01
Series:Marshall Journal of Medicine
Subjects:
Online Access:https://mds.marshall.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1092&context=mjm
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spelling doaj-963724ead76e42338db8665990595b492020-11-24T21:11:53ZengMarshall UniversityMarshall Journal of Medicine 2379-95362017-01-01317279http://dx.doi.org/10.18590/mjm.2017.vol3.iss1.12Self-Reported Tobacco Use and Correlation with Umbilical Cord Blood Cotinine levels at Delivery among Appalachian GravidasJesse Cottrell0Brenda L. Mitchell 1Pooja N. Sangani 2D'Andrea S. Thomas3Monica A. Valentovic4Marshall UniversityMarshall UniversityMarshall UniversityUniversity of Mississippi Medical CenterMarshall UniversityThe detrimental effects of cigarette use during pregnancy are well documented. Studies have shown that cigarette smoking while pregnant is associated with multiple adverse outcomes including: pre-term birth, placental abruption, placenta previa, fetal growth restriction, stillbirth, increased rate of birth defects, and increased risk of sudden infant death syndrome. Cotinine is the primary metabolite of nicotine and allows for measurement of active as well as passive exposure. Cotinine freely cross the placental barrier and maternal concentrations are closely correlated with newborn plasma levels. The aim of this study was to compare maternally reported rates of tobacco use to fetal umbilical cord blood cotinine levels at the time of delivery. A cross-sectional study was conducted on 172 patients. Patients were asked a single yes or no question in regards to their cigarette use during pregnancy. Cord blood was collected at the time of delivery and analyzed for serum concentrations of cotinine. Cotinine levels greater than 3.0 ng/mL were considered consistent with the use of tobacco or tobacco cessation products. Maternal self-reporting of tobacco use indicates a reported tobacco use rate of 27.3% and an actual use rate of 30.2%. The reported tobacco non-use rate was 72.7% and the actual non-use rate was 66.3%. The prevalence of tobacco use during pregnancy in our study was 30.2%, while the overall rate in the United States is reported to be 12.3%. Our findings indicate that self-reported smoking prevalence and verified umbilical cord blood cotinine levels at the time of delivery have excellent correlation (kappa=0.76). Compared to the national average our study group also had nearly double the rate of tobacco use. Due to the deleterious effects of cigarette use during pregnancy continued efforts to educate patients regarding cigarette cessation is of utmost importance as cessation of tobacco products will improve and promote maternal and fetal well-being.https://mds.marshall.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1092&context=mjmcigaretteAppalachiagravidafetussmokingnicotinecotinine
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Jesse Cottrell
Brenda L. Mitchell
Pooja N. Sangani
D'Andrea S. Thomas
Monica A. Valentovic
spellingShingle Jesse Cottrell
Brenda L. Mitchell
Pooja N. Sangani
D'Andrea S. Thomas
Monica A. Valentovic
Self-Reported Tobacco Use and Correlation with Umbilical Cord Blood Cotinine levels at Delivery among Appalachian Gravidas
Marshall Journal of Medicine
cigarette
Appalachia
gravida
fetus
smoking
nicotine
cotinine
author_facet Jesse Cottrell
Brenda L. Mitchell
Pooja N. Sangani
D'Andrea S. Thomas
Monica A. Valentovic
author_sort Jesse Cottrell
title Self-Reported Tobacco Use and Correlation with Umbilical Cord Blood Cotinine levels at Delivery among Appalachian Gravidas
title_short Self-Reported Tobacco Use and Correlation with Umbilical Cord Blood Cotinine levels at Delivery among Appalachian Gravidas
title_full Self-Reported Tobacco Use and Correlation with Umbilical Cord Blood Cotinine levels at Delivery among Appalachian Gravidas
title_fullStr Self-Reported Tobacco Use and Correlation with Umbilical Cord Blood Cotinine levels at Delivery among Appalachian Gravidas
title_full_unstemmed Self-Reported Tobacco Use and Correlation with Umbilical Cord Blood Cotinine levels at Delivery among Appalachian Gravidas
title_sort self-reported tobacco use and correlation with umbilical cord blood cotinine levels at delivery among appalachian gravidas
publisher Marshall University
series Marshall Journal of Medicine
issn 2379-9536
publishDate 2017-01-01
description The detrimental effects of cigarette use during pregnancy are well documented. Studies have shown that cigarette smoking while pregnant is associated with multiple adverse outcomes including: pre-term birth, placental abruption, placenta previa, fetal growth restriction, stillbirth, increased rate of birth defects, and increased risk of sudden infant death syndrome. Cotinine is the primary metabolite of nicotine and allows for measurement of active as well as passive exposure. Cotinine freely cross the placental barrier and maternal concentrations are closely correlated with newborn plasma levels. The aim of this study was to compare maternally reported rates of tobacco use to fetal umbilical cord blood cotinine levels at the time of delivery. A cross-sectional study was conducted on 172 patients. Patients were asked a single yes or no question in regards to their cigarette use during pregnancy. Cord blood was collected at the time of delivery and analyzed for serum concentrations of cotinine. Cotinine levels greater than 3.0 ng/mL were considered consistent with the use of tobacco or tobacco cessation products. Maternal self-reporting of tobacco use indicates a reported tobacco use rate of 27.3% and an actual use rate of 30.2%. The reported tobacco non-use rate was 72.7% and the actual non-use rate was 66.3%. The prevalence of tobacco use during pregnancy in our study was 30.2%, while the overall rate in the United States is reported to be 12.3%. Our findings indicate that self-reported smoking prevalence and verified umbilical cord blood cotinine levels at the time of delivery have excellent correlation (kappa=0.76). Compared to the national average our study group also had nearly double the rate of tobacco use. Due to the deleterious effects of cigarette use during pregnancy continued efforts to educate patients regarding cigarette cessation is of utmost importance as cessation of tobacco products will improve and promote maternal and fetal well-being.
topic cigarette
Appalachia
gravida
fetus
smoking
nicotine
cotinine
url https://mds.marshall.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1092&context=mjm
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AT dandreasthomas selfreportedtobaccouseandcorrelationwithumbilicalcordbloodcotininelevelsatdeliveryamongappalachiangravidas
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