Combined Effects of Sleeping Position and Prenatal Risk Factors in Sudden Infant Death Syndrome: The Nordic Epidemiological SIDS Study

Author:

Øyen Nina12,Markestad Trond3,PhD Rolv Skjærven24,Irgens Lorentz M12,Helweg-Larsen Karin5,Alm Bernt6,Norvenius Gunnar6,Wennergren Göran6

Affiliation:

1. From the Division of Preventive Medicine, Department of Public Health and Primary Health Care,

2. Medical Birth Registry of Norway,

3. Department of Pediatrics, and

4. Section for Medical Informatics and Statistics, University of Bergen, Bergen, Norway; and

5. The Danish Institute for Clinical Epidemiology, Copenhagen, Denmark, and

6. Department of Pediatrics, University of Göteborg, Göteborg, Sweden.

Abstract

Objective. Prone sleeping is a strong risk factor for sudden infant death syndrome (SIDS). We investigated whether the combined effect of prone sleeping position and prenatal risk factors further increased the SIDS risk. Methods. In the Nordic Epidemiological SIDS Study, parents of SIDS victims in Denmark, Norway, and Sweden completed a questionnaire on potential risk factors for SIDS. Forensic pathologists verified the SIDS diagnosis. Four controls of the same gender, age, and place of birth were selected. This matched case–control study, which included 244 SIDS cases and 869 controls from 1992 to 1995, was analyzed by conditional logistic regression. Results. Odds ratios (ORs) for prone and side sleeping compared with supine sleeping for the last sleep were 13.9 (95% confidence interval 8.2–24) and 3.5 (2.1–5.7). Infants 13 to 24 weeks old had particularly high risk in prone and side sleeping, at 28.5 (7.9–107) and 5.9 (1.6–22). OR for prone sleeping was higher in girls, at 30.4 (11–88), than in boys, 10.3 (5.5–19). We found strong combined effects of sleeping position and prenatal risk factors (more than multiplicative). The OR for prone and side sleeping was increased for infants with birth weight <2500 g, at 83 (25–276) and 36.6 (13–107); for preterm infants, at 48.8 (19–128) and 40.5 (14–115); and for intrauterine growth retarded, at 38.8 (14–108) and 9.6 (4.3–22), compared with supine position in infants without these prenatal factors. The combined effect of nonsupine positions and intrauterine growth retarded was highest among 13- to 24-week-old infants. Effects of combined presence of nonsupine sleeping positions and each of the factors of smoking in pregnancy, young maternal age, higher parity, low level of maternal education, and single motherhood were more than additive. Attributable fractions in the population for prone and side sleeping were 18.5% and 26.0%. Conclusions. Both prone and side sleeping increased the risk of SIDS. The risk was increased further in low birth weight infants, preterm infants, and infants at the age of 13 to 24 weeks, suggesting that SIDS may be triggered by nonsupine sleeping in infants with prenatal risk factors during a vulnerable period of postnatal development.

Publisher

American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP)

Subject

Pediatrics, Perinatology, and Child Health

Reference64 articles.

1. Secular trends of sudden infant death syndrome and other causes of post perinatal mortality in Norwegian birth cohorts 1967–1984.;Irgens;Acta Paediatr Scand,1989

2. Sudden infant death syndrome (SIDS) in Denmark: evaluation of the increasing incidence of registered SIDS in the period 1972 to 1983 and results of a prospective study in 1987 through 1988.;Helweg-Larsen;Pediatrics,1992

3. Secular trends of sudden infant death syndrome in Norway, 1967–1988. Application of a method of case identification to Norwegian registry data.;Øyen;Paediatr Perinat Epidemiol,1994

4. Overheating and sudden infant death. Temperature regulation in relation to the prone position, the possible pathogenesis of sudden infant death [in Danish].;Helweg-Larsen;Ugeskr Laeger,1994

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