大休斯顿地区围产期差异母婴环境健康风险研究:基本原理、研究设计和参与者概况

E. Symanski, K. W. Whitworth, Hector Mendez-Figueroa, K. M. Aagaard, I. Moussa, Juan Alvarez, Adrien Chardon Fabian, Kurunthachalam Kannan, Cheryl L. Walker, Cristian Coarfa, M. Suter, H. M. Salihu
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引用次数: 0

摘要

母婴环境健康风险研究中心(MIEHR)的成立旨在研究生物、物理、社会和建筑环境中化学和非化学压力源之间的相互作用,这些压力源对美国一个大型多元化城市地区的黑人孕妇的围产期健康产生了极大的影响。在注册时,所有参与者都需要提供尿液样本进行化学(金属、可替宁和多环芳烃)分析,并提供血液样本。还有一部分参与者需要提供口腔和阴道拭子以及粪便样本。调查问卷和电子健康记录数据收集有关怀孕期间居住地址、怀孕史和产前护理、社会人口和生活方式因素、歧视和压力经历以及社会支持来源的信息。利用受试者在怀孕期间的居住地信息,我们可以了解其周围环境的特征。我们分别总结了整个群体以及黑人和白人参与者的个人和邻里层面的主要特征。2021 年 4 月至 2023 年 2 月间,我们招募了 1244 名孕妇。几乎所有参与者都提供了尿液样本,略少于一半的参与者提供了血液样本。与之前的研究相比,迄今为止对 47% 的参与者进行的多环芳烃暴露模式评估显示,不同代谢物的暴露水平各不相同。此外,分析表明黑人和白人孕妇在歧视经历、压力和社会支持水平以及邻里特征方面存在差异。我们目前的研究结果凸显了种族在歧视、压力、支持水平以及邻里特征方面的差异。生物样本将用于分析金属和多环芳烃代谢物(尿样)、miRNAs(血浆样本)和微生物组(口腔拭子)。一旦注册结束,将计划进行正式评估,以阐明导致黑人与白人围产期健康差异的环境风险景观中个人和社区层面的特征。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The Maternal and Infant Environmental Health Riskscape study of perinatal disparities in greater Houston: rationale, study design and participant profiles
The Maternal and Infant Environmental Health Riskscape (MIEHR) Center was established to address the interplay among chemical and non-chemical stressors in the biological, physical, social, and built environments that disproportionately impact perinatal health among Black pregnant people in a large and diverse urban area with documented disparities in the U.S.The MIEHR cohort is recruiting non-Hispanic Black and non-Hispanic white pregnant people who deliver their infants at major obstetric hospitals in Houston, Texas. At enrollment, all participants are asked to provide urine samples for chemical [metals, cotinine, and polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs)] analyses and blood samples. A subset of the cohort is asked to provide oral and vaginal swabs, and fecal samples. Questionnaire and electronic health record data gather information about residential address history during pregnancy, pregnancy history and prenatal care, sociodemographic and lifestyle factors, experiences of discrimination and stress, and sources of social support. Using information on where a participant lived during their pregnancy, features of their neighborhood environment are characterized. We provide summaries of key individual- and neighborhood-level features of the entire cohort, as well as for Black and white participants separately.Between April 2021 and February 2023, 1,244 pregnant people were recruited. Nearly all participants provided urine samples and slightly less than half provided blood samples. PAH exposure patterns as assessed on 47% of participants thus far showed varying levels depending on metabolite as compared to previous studies. Additionally, analyses suggest differences between Black and white pregnant people in experiences of discrimination, stress, and levels of social support, as well as in neighborhood characteristics.Our findings to date highlight racial differences in experiences of discrimination, stress, and levels of support, as well as neighborhood characteristics. Recruitment of the cohort is ongoing and additional neighborhood metrics are being constructed. Biospecimens will be analyzed for metals and PAH metabolites (urine samples), miRNAs (plasma samples) and the microbiome (oral swabs). Once enrollment ends, formal assessments are planned to elucidate individual- and neighborhood-level features in the environmental riskscape that contribute to Black-White disparities in perinatal health.
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