What Increases Your Risk
Risk factors associated with
Down syndrome vary according to its
classification. Factors that increase the risk that a
baby will have trisomy 21 type Down syndrome, the most common type (95% of all
cases), include:
- Having an older mother. Women who are older than
35 have an increased risk for having a child with trisomy 21 type Down
syndrome. This risk increases continually with advancing age.
- Having an older father. Medical researchers are
looking at the link between a man's age and the risk of having a child with
Down syndrome. Early studies suggest that if a father is older than 40 and a
mother is older than 35, they have an increased risk of having a child with
Down syndrome.2
- Having a sibling with Down syndrome. Women who
have had a child with trisomy 21 type Down syndrome have a 1-in-100 chance of
having another child with the condition.3
Mosaicism is a type of Down syndrome that produces
extra genetic material in some of the baby's cells, while the other cells
develop normally. Mosaicism affects about 3 out of 100 people who have Down
syndrome.4 The risk factors for mosaicism are similar
to those for trisomy 21.
Translocation-type Down syndrome is the
only type that is sometimes directly inherited. But the majority of
translocation-type Down syndrome cases are sporadic (random) genetic mutations,
with no known cause. Translocation accounts for about 4% of all cases of Down
syndrome.5
You may be a
carrier of the translocation gene if you have:
- A family history of Down syndrome. Translocation-type Down syndrome genes may have been passed on to
you if other members of your family have the condition.
- Had other children with Down syndrome. Although
translocation-type Down syndrome is most often a sporadic genetic mutation, if
you have had a child with this type, you may be a carrier of the gene.
Questions still need to be answered about the
specific risk factors for Down syndrome. So far, research has not found any
environmental influences that contribute to developing the condition. Medical
researchers do not know why cells sometimes divide abnormally and produce the
extra genetic material that results in Down syndrome.