Can eating breakfast
cereal determine the sex of your baby?
A debate over that question in a British scientific journal shows why some observational studies should be taken with a big shaker of salt.
The original study, 'You Are What Your Mother Eats,' in the journal Proceedings of the Royal Society B, made headlines around the world last April. Researchers at Exeter and Oxford universities asked 740
pregnant women to record what they ate during pregnancy and just before. Not
surprisingly, their diets during pregnancy had no correlation with their babies' gender.
But 56% of women who consumed the most calories before
conception gave birth to boys, compared with 45% of those who consumed the least. Of 132 individual foods tracked, breakfast
cereal was the most
significantly linked with baby boys.
How could that be? The authors said animal studies also found male offspring are more common in times of plenty; they speculated that higher glucose levels in mothers may favor the survival of male embryos, which are slightly heavier than females.
Baloney, said some U.S. statisticians, who suspected the
finding was simply a false association that can occur by chance in a large set of data.
'Think of it this way: The
probability of getting all spades in a given
bridge hand is infinitesimally small, but in all the
bridge games all over the world, somebody might,' says Stan Young, assistant director of the National Institute of Statistical Sciences in Research Triangle Park, N.C. He obtained the study data, re-analyzed it and wrote a
commentary in the journal's current issue
saying the
cerealfinding was pure chance.
The study's authors wrote a rebuttal disputing Dr. Young's analysis and standing by their
findings.
Behind the
cereal squabble lies a deep divide between statisticians and epidemiologists about the nature of chance in observational studies in which researchers track peoples' habits and look for associations with their health but don't
intervene at all.
Statisticians say
random associations are rampant in such studies, which is why so many have contradictory
findings. To prove the point, researchers in Ontario
studied the astrological signs of hospital patients and found that Sagittarians are
susceptible to fractures, Pisces are prone to heart failure, and so on. The links met the
traditionalmathematical standard for 'statistical
significance' but were completely
random, and disappeared when the study was
repeated with a different sample.
Some statisticians argue for a tougher standard of proof when researchers are
fishing in large data sets. One method, a Bonferroni
adjustment, requires dividing the usual
mathematicalformula by the number of
variables; if 100 foods are
studied, the link must be 100 times as strong as usual to be considered
significant. Otherwise, statisticians say only
strict clinical trials with a control group and a test group and one
variable can truly prove a cause-and-effect association.
Epidemiologists argue that a Bonferroni
adjustment throws out many
legitimatefindings, and that it's irrelevant how many other factors are
studiedsimultaneously. They also note that controlled clinical trials are costly, time-consuming and sometimes unethical. The link between smoking and cancer, for example, was seen in many observational studies, but forcing subjects to smoke for years to prove it would be untenable.
In the
cereal study, Dr. Young argues that the data collected on the mothers' diets at mid-pregnancy should be factored into the
adjustment for statistical
significance, and that when it is, the
significance of breakfast
cereal vanished. 'If you can pick and choose your data after the fact, you can make them look however you want,' he says.
'There's no way that the mother's diet in mid-pregnancy would affect the gender of her infant,' counters Fiona Mathews, the lead author and a
lecturer in mammalian
biology at Exeter, who says that data was included only for comparison.
So does breakfast
cereal affect a baby's gender? Don't paint the
nursery yet. A good rule of thumb is to wait and see if an observation association pops up again when the study is
repeated, something Dr. Mathews says she plans to do.
MELINDA BECK