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Pregnancy, Estrogen Exposure, and the Development of Otosclerosis: A Case‐Control Study of 1196 Women
Author(s) -
Macielak Robert J.,
Marinelli John P.,
Totten Douglas J.,
Lohse Christine M.,
Grossardt Brandon R.,
Carlson Matthew L.
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
otolaryngology–head and neck surgery
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.232
H-Index - 121
eISSN - 1097-6817
pISSN - 0194-5998
DOI - 10.1177/0194599820966295
Subject(s) - otosclerosis , medicine , odds ratio , oophorectomy , interquartile range , confidence interval , population , surgery , gynecology , hysterectomy , environmental health
Objective This study sought to determine whether a history of pregnancy or bilateral oophorectomy is associated with subsequent otosclerosis development or disease severity. Study Design Population‐based case‐control study. Setting Olmsted County, Minnesota. Methods Women diagnosed with otosclerosis were matched to 3 women without otosclerosis based on age and historical depth of medical records. Associations of prior delivery and bilateral oophorectomy with subsequent development of otosclerosis and with pure‐tone average (PTA) at the time of otosclerosis diagnosis were evaluated. Results We studied 1196 women: 299 cases of otosclerosis and 897 matched controls. The odds ratio for the association of ≥1 delivery with otosclerosis was 1.16 (95% confidence interval [CI] 0.85‐1.60; P =. 35). Odds ratios for the associations of 1, 2, 3, or ≥4 deliveries with otosclerosis were 1.22 (0.83‐1.80), 1.09 (0.71‐1.68), 1.28 (0.77‐2.12), and 1.00 (0.54‐1.84), respectively. The odds ratio for the association of prior bilateral oophorectomy with otosclerosis was 1.12 (0.58‐2.18; P =. 73). In cases with otosclerosis, PTA at diagnosis was not significantly higher for women with ≥1 delivery as compared with those without (median 45 dB hearing loss [HL] [interquartile range {IQR} 36‐55] vs 43 [IQR 34‐53]; P = 0.18) but was significantly higher for women with bilateral oophorectomy compared with those without (median 54 dB HL [IQR 44‐61] vs 44 [IQR 34‐53]; P =. 03). Conclusion These data do not support a relationship between endogenous estrogen exposure and development of otosclerosis. Women with otosclerosis who had a history of pregnancy did not have significantly worse hearing at the time of diagnosis, suggesting that pregnancy is not associated with disease severity.

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