Study reports more twins than ever


Tuesday, 16 March, 2021

Study reports more twins than ever

A global review of twinning rates finds that humans are giving birth to more twins than ever before.

Published in the journal Human Reproduction, the study finds that, since the 1980s, the twinning rate has increased by a third from 9 to 12 per 1000 deliveries, meaning that about 1.6 million twins are born each year worldwide and one in every 42 children born is a twin.

The study finds that a major cause of the increase is the growth in medically assisted reproduction (MAR), which includes not only IVF (in vitro fertilisation) techniques, but also simpler methods, such as ovarian stimulation and artificial insemination. Another cause of the increase is the delay in childbearing observed in many countries over the last decades, since the twinning rate increases with the mother’s age.

The researchers suspect that we may have reached the peak in twinning rates, particularly in high-income countries such as Europe and North America, because of increasing emphasis on the importance of trying to achieve singleton pregnancies. Whether this is also the case in lower-income countries is less certain and has important implications for the health of mothers and babies, and also healthcare resources.

“The relative and absolute numbers of twins in the world are higher than they have ever been since the mid-twentieth century and this is likely to be an all-time high, said the study’s first author Professor Christiaan Monden from the University of Oxford. “This is important as twin deliveries are associated with higher death rates among babies and children and more complications for mothers and children during pregnancy, and during and after delivery.”

Professor Monden and his colleagues, Professor Gilles Pison of the French Museum of Natural History in Paris and Professor Jeroen Smits of Radboud University in The Netherlands, collected information on twinning rates for the 2010–2015 period from 165 countries, covering 99% of the world’s population. For 112 countries, the team obtained information on twinning rates for the period 1980–1985.

They found substantial increases in twinning rates in many European countries, in North America and in Asia. For 74% of the 112 countries, for which data were available for both periods, the increase was more than 10%. There was a 32% increase in Asia and a 71% increase in North America. A decrease of more than 10% was found in only seven countries.

“In both periods Africa had the highest twinning rates and there was no significant increase over time. However, Europe, North America and the Oceanic countries are catching up rapidly. About 80% of all twin deliveries in the world now take place in Asia and Africa,” Professor Monden said.

“The twinning rate in Africa is so high because of the high number of dizygotic twins born there — twins born from two separate eggs. This is most likely to be due to genetic differences between the African population and other populations.

“The absolute number of twin deliveries has increased everywhere except in South America. In North America and Africa, the numbers have increased by more than 80%, and in Africa this increase is almost entirely caused by population growth.”

Most of the increase in twinning rates comes from dizygotic twins, while there has been little change in the rate of monozygotic twins (twins from the same egg), which has remained stable at about four per 1000 deliveries worldwide.

According to Professor Smits, the study has important implications, particularly in respect of the growth in twinning rates in low- and middle-income countries.

“Because infant mortality rates among twins have been going down, many more of the twins born in the second period of our study will grow up as twins compared to those born in the early ’80s. However, more attention needs to be paid to the fate of twins in low- and middle-income countries. In sub-Saharan Africa in particular, many twins will lose their co-twin in their first year of life, some two to three hundred thousand each year according to our earlier research. While twinning rates in many rich Western countries are now getting close to those in sub-Saharan Africa, there is a huge difference in the survival chances.”1

The researchers say that countries need to keep better data on twin births, particularly lower-income countries where deaths among twins is highest, as reliable statistics are lacking in many places.

“Most data suggest we are at a peak in high-income countries, especially Europe and North America. Africa will be one of the main drivers in the coming decades,” Professor Pison said.

“We might see a combination of lower overall fertility, older ages at birth and more medically assisted reproduction. The former would lead to lower twinning rates, the latter two to higher twinning rates. The net effect of these different drivers is uncertain. Due to their size, India and China will also play a major role. In both cases, medically assisted reproduction might increase twinning rates, while further declines in fertility are more likely in India than in China. Again, the net result is difficult to predict. Advances in IVF make it more likely than not that in the future we will see fewer twin births as a result of IVF.”2

The researchers plan to update their results with data for the early 2020s to see whether twinning rates have indeed peaked and started to decrease in high-income countries, and what will be the effect of the wider spread of MAR in low- and middle-income countries.

References

  1. Mortality among twins and singletons in sub-Saharan Africa between 1995 and 2014: pooled analysis of data from 90 demographic and health surveys in 30 countries. Christiaan Monden and Jeroen Smits. Lancet Global Health 2017; 5:e673-79. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/S2214-109X(17)30197-3.
  2. Twinning rates in developed countries: Trends and explanations. Gilles Pison, Christiaan Monden and Jeroen Smits. Population and Development Review 2015; 41(4): 629–649 https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1728-4457.2015.00088.x.

Image credit: ©stock.adobe.com/au/Robert Hammer

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