Mary
Boland, a PhD student at Columbia University Medical Center, was
investigating old studies relating the time of year a person is born to
the odds of developing asthma, when she had the idea for her team’s new study published this week in the Journal of the American Medical Informatics Association: Does your birth month affect your health outcomes later in life?
“It
turns out that if a newborn is exposed to high levels of dust mites in
their first few months of life that they have higher incidence of a
certain type of asthma later,” says Nicholas Tatonetti, PhD, an
assistant professor of biomedical informatics at Columbia University
Medical Center and Columbia’s Data Science Institute. “This kind of
study has been done quite a bit in a one-off fashion, studying this
disease or that disease. … We were curious if we could recapitulate some
of those early findings.”
And so they did.
With
access to data on 1.7 million patients treated at NewYork-Presbyterian
Hospital/Columbia University Medical Center between 1985 and 2013, the
researchers used an algorithm to look at relationships between birth
month and disease risk. The goal was to see if there were any spikes in
specific diseases at certain times of year.
Overall, May babies seem to have the lowest disease risk and October babies have the highest.
In
fact, the scientists found 55 diseases that correlated with the season
of a person’s birth, and also uncovered 16 entirely new correlations —
including nine types of heart disease.
“The
most striking was a trend we found that those born in late winter or
early spring were more likely to have heart disease,” Tatonetti tells
Yahoo Health. “And we didn’t find just one type of heart disease
associated with birth month, but we actually found several.”People born in March have the highest risk of atrial fibrillation, congestive heart failure and mitral valve disorder, and the scientists suggest that 1 in 40 cases is related to a seasonal variable. The scientists suggest this may have something to do with fluctuating levels of vitamin D. Since heart disease is the leading cause of death in the United States, this could help doctors hone in on early prevention strategies.
Month-related disease risks may often be determined by changing environmental and circumstantial factors. For example, the researchers found that asthma risk for New York patients peaked with July and October births. A previous study conducted in Denmark found that risk was heightened for people born in the months of May and August — when the country’s sunlight levels are most similar to New York’s. Sunlight is a factor in asthma exacerbated by dust mites.
Perhaps
ADHD diagnoses spike with births later in the year (late November),
because of the relative immaturity of these children compared with their
peers in school. The age cutoff for schoolchildren in New York City is
Dec. 31, meaning higher demands are placed on them earlier, with less
time for development.
The
researchers hope this sort of data may help uncover new risk factors
for some diseases. However, Tatonetti says that, while significant for
future study, there’s no need to panic about your month-related disease
risks.
“The
risk we found that can be attributed to birth month is on par with what
you would find from genetic analyses,” he explains. “Lifestyle, diet,
and exercise are still stronger factors when considering your health.”
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