Boston Birth Cohort Profile: Rationale and Study Design.

Precision nutrition Pub Date : 2022-11-01 Epub Date: 2022-08-18
Colleen Pearson, Tami Bartell, Guoying Wang, Xiumei Hong, Serena A Rusk, LingLing Fu, Sandra Cerda, Blandine Bustamante-Helfrich, Wendy Kuohung, Christina Yarrington, William G Adams, Xiaobin Wang
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Abstract

In 1998, the Boston Birth Cohort (BBC) was initiated at Boston Medical Center (BMC) in response to persistently high rates of preterm birth (PTB, defined as birth before 37 weeks of gestation) in the US population and the longstanding profound PTB disparity among Black, Indigenous, and people of color (BIPOC). The BBC encompasses two linked study protocols: The Preterm Birth Study serves as the baseline recruitment in the BBC. It aims to address fundamental questions about the causes and consequences of PTB. The study oversamples preterm babies using a case/control study design, in which cases are defined as mothers who deliver a preterm and/or low birthweight baby (<2500 grams regardless of gestational age). Controls are enrolled at a 2:1 control/case ratio and matched by maternal age (±5 years), self-reported race and ethnicity, and date of delivery (± 7 days for case delivery). From inception, it was designed as a comprehensive gene-environmental study of PTB. As a natural extension, the Children's Health Study, under a separate but linked IRB protocol, is a longitudinal follow-up study of the participants who were recruited at birth in the Preterm Birth Study and who continue pediatric care at BMC. This linked model allows for investigation of early life origins of pediatric and chronic disease in a prospective cohort design. The BBC is one of the largest and longest NIH-funded prospective birth cohort studies in the US, consisting of 8733 mother-child dyads enrolled in the Preterm Birth Study at birth, and of those, 3,592 children have been enrolled in the Children's Health Study, with a median follow-up of 14.5 years. The BBC mirrors the urban, under-resourced and underrepresented BIPOC population served by BMC. A high proportion of BBC children were born prematurely and had chronic health conditions (e.g., asthma, obesity and elevated blood pressure) in childhood. The BBC's long-term goal has been to build a large, comprehensive database (epidemiological, clinical, multi-omics) and biospecimen repository to elucidate early life origins of pediatric and chronic diseases and identify modifiable upstream factors (e.g., psychosocial, environmental, nutritional) to improve health across the life course for BIPOC mothers and children.

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波士顿出生队列简介:基本原理和研究设计。
1998年,波士顿医学中心(BMC)启动了波士顿出生队列(BBC),以应对美国人口中持续高的早产率(PTB,定义为妊娠37周前出生)以及黑人,土著和有色人种(BIPOC)中长期存在的深刻PTB差异。英国广播公司包括两个相关的研究方案:早产研究是英国广播公司招募的基线。它的目的是解决关于肺结核病因和后果的基本问题。该研究采用病例/对照研究设计,对早产婴儿进行了抽样调查,其中病例定义为分娩早产和/或低出生体重婴儿的母亲(儿童健康研究,在一个独立但相关的IRB协议下,是一项纵向随访研究,参与者在早产研究中出生时被招募,并继续在BMC进行儿科护理。这种关联模型允许在前瞻性队列设计中调查儿童和慢性疾病的早期生命起源。BBC是美国国家卫生研究院资助的规模最大、时间最长的前瞻性出生队列研究之一,包括8733对在出生时参加早产研究的母婴,其中3592名儿童参加了儿童健康研究,中位随访时间为14.5年。BBC反映了BMC服务的城市、资源不足和代表性不足的BIPOC人口。在英国广播公司的儿童中,有很大一部分是早产儿,儿童时期患有慢性健康问题(如哮喘、肥胖和高血压)。英国广播公司的长期目标是建立一个大型综合数据库(流行病学、临床、多组学)和生物标本库,以阐明儿科和慢性疾病的早期生命起源,并确定可改变的上游因素(如社会心理、环境、营养),以改善BIPOC母亲和儿童整个生命过程中的健康。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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