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NCT ID: NCT00340860 Completed - Pregnancy Clinical Trials

The Norwegian Mother and Child Study - Environmental Specimen Collection

Start date: October 1, 2001
Phase:
Study type: Observational

The Norway Mother and Child study is a collaborative venture among health researchers in Norway funded by the Norwegian government. The study is being coordinated by the National Institute of Public Health (aka Folkehelsa) in Oslo and the Medical Birth Registry (MBR) in Bergen. NIEHS has the unique opportunity to participate through the collection of additional tubes of blood during the blood sample collection; these two tubes of blood and a urine sample will allow NIEHS and collaborators to explore environmental determinants for disease among women and their children. These additional samples will remain in the Biobank in Oslo, Norway, with other samples from cohort members and will be used under collaboration with Norwegian investigators. To achieve better health for mothers and children in the future, the Norway Mother and Child study is designed to test specific hypotheses about the causes of a number of serious diseases by recruiting 110,000 pregnant women to a cohort study. As part of the primary aim of the study, women will be asked to provide a blood sample at 17 weeks gestation, at birth, and 4 days after birth. The NIEHS samples will be collected at the blood draw at 17 weeks gestation. Likely causal factors will be linked to information obtained from questionnaires, blood samples, and medical registers. The Norway Mother and Child study has multiple endpoints. Primarily those associated with adverse pregnancy outcomes will be studied, but also diseases affecting mother, father or child. Endpoints will be taken from questionnaires and medical registers. The study will be carried out nationally and any research groups with relevant questions will be able to participate. The Norway Mother and Child study has been approved by the Norwegian Parliament as well as their Data Inspectorate to ensure that the study and all protocols conform to Norwegian ethical standards as well as appropriate research ethical criteria. Further, the project has been evaluated by the Regional Ethics Committee for Medical Research which has approved all modifications to the project. Other researchers, nationally and internationally, will have access to the cohort on request and following approval from the project's executive group. NIEHS has the opportunity to add additional biological specimens for blood and urine to the base cohort. Two additional tubes of blood (total volume 9 ml) and a urine sample will be collected as part of the routine prenatal ultrasound visit and blood sample collection included in the overall study protocol. As part of a reliability sub-study, blood and urine samples will also be collected an additional two times, at weeks 23 and 29 of gestation. These samples are designed to allow investigators to explore environmental contributors to the health of women and their children. Low level exposure to environmental contaminants occurs in all industrialized countries, though the level of exposure may differ as the result of diet, cooking practices and pollution sources. However, the ability to explore the role of environmental exposure on health is often more limited by good population-based information on health and disease then by exposure level. Thus, by creating a biological specimen repository in a country with excellent disease registries, it will allow NIEHS to explore risk factors for disease relevant to US populations. All samples will be stored in Norway and will be used in collaboration with Norwegian and other investigators. NIEHS investigators will not have access to identifying information. NIEHS samples will not be used for genetic analyses. ...