Obesity Clinical Trial
Official title:
BASELINE: Babies After Scope: Evaluating the Longitudinal Impact Using Neurological and Nutritional Endpoints
The Departments of Paediatrics and Child Health, Obstetrics/Gynaecology and Nutritional Sciences, University College Cork, and the Department of Dermatology, Trinity College, Dublin have a unique and urgent opportunity to form a birth cohort of over 2000 children whose growth and maternal health status will have been closely monitored from early pregnancy. Longitudinal monitoring of these infants will allow direct investigation of several research areas in a way which has not previously been possible in Ireland, or abroad. The investigators propose to focus on three main research themes: the effects of intrauterine growth restriction, the incidence and prevalence of food allergy and eczema in early childhood and the incidence and effects of maternal and infant vitamin D status on the growth and health of Irish children. Although the investigators initial proposal will focus on these important areas, the formation of this birth cohort will offer many opportunities for further research as the cohort grows older. It will form a unique bio-bank of information from Irish children collected longitudinally from soon after their conception. The mothers of these infants are currently being recruited, which leaves us with a narrow window of opportunity to put in place a pathway of investigation for these children. To ignore this opportunity would be to lose access to a wealth of information regarding child health and disease. The potential for this cohort to provide definitive answers to current, and future, theories of disease causation is enormous.
SPECIFIC AIMS:
Our underlying aim is to establish a prospective paediatric birth cohort which will have
access to detailed information on maternal health, fetal growth, and childhood nutrition,
growth and development in the first 2 years of life. This cohort will have the advantage of
a stored biobank of maternal and fetal plasma, serum and DNA. This cohort will allow us to
monitor the effects of intrauterine growth and nutrition on early life illnesses.
Our specific aims are:
1. To establish the fetal and early life growth trajectories which foretell later
neurocognitive disability and metabolic disorder
2. To establish the incidence and prevalence of food allergy and eczema in Irish children
and investigate the relationship between Vitamin D deficiency and allergic disorders of
early childhood.
3. To establish the prevalence of maternal and neonatal vitamin D deficiency in an Irish
paediatric population
Introduction:
There is increasing evidence that the intrauterine environment has important effects, not
only on fetal growth, but also on the life-long health of the child. A term infant is the
end result of nine months of immunological and nutritional interplay between the fetus,
placenta and mother. Therefore, it is not surprising that this nutritional and hormonal
environment has far-reaching effects on childhood health and adult health risk. Fetal
nutritional status has been repeatedly linked with adult risk of hypertension,
hypercholesterolaemia, Type 2 diabetes and cardiovascular disease. Fetal growth restriction
may be associated with neurocognitive delay and long term behavioural problems. We know that
maternal vitamin D status has a direct effect on bone growth, not just in neonates, but also
on the bone mass and fracture risk of the adolescent offspring. More recently there is some
evidence that maternal vitamin D and E deficiency may contribute to a substantial proportion
of the increasing incidence of childhood asthma. It is clear, then, that to establish the
pathophysiology of many childhood diseases we will need to look back to long before birth.
Previous large birth cohorts in the UK have added greatly to our current knowledge of
paediatric health and disease. However the early ALSPAC cohort study examining the "Children
of the Nineties" did not have access to the detailed and serial fetal scanning which the
SCOPE study will provide to BASELINE. The more recent Southampton Women's Study recruited a
similar number of maternal and fetal dyads. The SWS study protocol included fetal scanning
and stored DNA, but does not have a cord biobank of serum and plasma samples. The BASELINE
study will have access to maternal blood sampling, detailed health questionnaires, serial
fetal scanning and multiple aliquots of stored umbilical cord blood. In addition our study
will provide reference data in Irish children, something which overseas cohorts can not
provide to Irish health care planners and providers.
We believe that the BASELINE study is Ireland's opportunity to establish a longitudinal
birth cohort with the potential to answer important questions in the study of diseases in
early life, later childhood and beyond. We will be able to identify risk factors for common
disorders such as diabetes, eczema and asthma. The BASELINE genetic biobank will allow us to
examine candidate genetic markers of disorders as they arise in the cohort. This study has
the potential to transform the landscape of paediatric research in Ireland.
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