Relative death into the very first cousin (1C; F = 0

Relative death into the very first cousin (1C; F = 0

Consanguinity, Death, and you may Morbidity

To investigate the impact of consanguinity on deaths from ?6 months gestation to an average of 10 years of age, a metaanalysis was conducted directly comparing prereproductive mortality in first-cousin versus nonconsanguineous progeny within specific populations. The study sample comprised 69 populations resident in 15 countries located across four continents, with a total sample size of 2.14 million (Table S1). An unweighted linear regression comparing mean mortality in first-cousin versus nonconsanguineous progeny in each population was plotted according to the standard equation y = a + bx. The results are presented in Fig. 3 as a scatter diagram and show a mean excess mortality at first-cousin level of 3.5% (r 2 = 0.70; P < 0.00001) that is consistent across the range of control mortalities, i.e., the level of excess consanguinity-associated mortality is independent of the basal (nonconsanguineous) death rate in each study population. (more…)

Continue ReadingRelative death into the very first cousin (1C; F = 0