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 Patients Prescribed DES While Pregnant
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 Offspring of DES Daughters and Sons
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Health Care Providers Home > Information to Identify and Manage DES Patients > Patients Who Are Offspring of DES Daughters and Sons > Identification of the Offspring of DES Daughters and Sons
Patients Who Are Offspring of DES Daughters and Sons

Patients Who Are Offspring of DES Daughters and Sons

 Overview
 Identification of the Offspring of DES Daughters and Sons
 Counseling the Offspring of DES Daughters and Sons
 Ongoing Research on the Offspring of DES Daughters and Sons
 DES References: Research on Offspring of DES Daughters and Sons
Identification of the Offspring of DES Daughters and Sons

Few human studies have been conducted to determine if DES-related health effects occur in the Third Generation (offspring of DES Daughters and Sons). However, animal studies have shown that Third Generation mice suffer from increased health risks as they age. As a result it is important to identify patients whose parents were exposed to DES in utero.

In the United States, DES was prescribed primarily to prevent spontaneous abortion and premature delivery between 1938 and 1971 (12). Never patented, it was prescribed under more than 200 brand names under a variety of dosage regimens, including in combination with vitamins (290). DES was shown to lack efficacy for prevention of pregnancy complications in 1953 (291). However, it was still widely prescribed until it was demonstrated, in the early 1970s, that women exposed to DES in utero (DES Daughters) developed clear cell adenocarcinoma (CCA) of the vagina and cervix at a rate significantly higher than the general population (132,157).

Although public education campaigns were taken, not all DES-exposed men and women know about their exposure. DES was prescribed to pregnant women outside the United States after 1971, and is still available in oral form for human use in some countries today (296). Some persons may be aware that their grandmother was prescribed DES while pregnant. Others may identify that their mother suffered from reproductive tract structural differences typical for DES, that their father had genitourinary abnormalities suspected to be related to DES exposure, or that their mother had CCA. Such persons should be considered as possibly transgenerationally exposed to DES. For more information on the drug DES, including details of current usage, refer to DES: Pharmacology.

For a complete list of the numbered citations on this page see DES References.

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