Weinmann Tobias, Gerlich Jessica, Heinrich Sabine, Nowak Dennis, Gerdes Jennifer, Schlichtiger Jenny, von Mutius Erika, Schaub Bianca, Vogelberg Christian, Roller Diana, Radon Katja
Occupational and Environmental Epidemiology & NetTeaching Unit, Institute and Outpatient Clinic for Occupational, Social and Environmental Medicine, University Hospital of Munich (LMU), Ziemssenstr. 1, 80336, Munich, Germany.
German Centre for Lung Research (DZL), Munich, Germany.
BMC Public Health. 2015 Dec 4;15:1210. doi: 10.1186/s12889-015-2555-y.
Atopic diseases are a major burden of disease on a global scale. Regarding their aetiology, the early years of life are assumed to play a crucial role. In addition, there is growing evidence that elucidating the impact of cross-generational effects and epigenetic mechanisms such as DNA methylation can substantially widen the scientific knowledge of the occurrence and progression of these diseases. We are thus aiming at following the course of asthma, allergies, and potential risk factors for their occurrence across three generations by establishing a birth cohort in the offspring of an existing population-based cohort.
METHODS/DESIGN: 2051 young adults who have been recruited in 1995 for Phase II of the International Study of Asthma and Allergies in Childhood (ISAAC) and who have subsequently been followed-up by the Study on Occupational Allergy Risks (SOLAR) are asked bi-annually since 2009 if they conceived a child in the meantime. If parenthood is reported, parents are invited to enrol along with their children in the ACROSSOLAR cohort. Participation involves completing a questionnaire assessing general and health-related information about the course of the pregnancy and the first year of life of their children. Subsequently, the children are followed up until primary school age when asthma and allergies can be diagnosed reliably. In addition, DNA for epigenetic analysis will be collected and analysed. Longitudinal data analysis techniques will then be used to assess potential associations between early-life exposures and onset of childhood asthma and allergies taking into account epigenetics.
Birth cohorts are especially suited to elucidate the impact of genetic predisposition, epigenetics, exposures during the first years of life, and gene-environment interactions on the occurrence and progression of asthma and allergies. By building upon an existing cohort, ACROSSOLAR offers a unique and cost-effective opportunity to investigate the aetiology of atopic disease in a prospective and cross-generational way.
过敏性疾病是全球范围内的主要疾病负担。关于其病因,人们认为生命早期起着关键作用。此外,越来越多的证据表明,阐明跨代效应和表观遗传机制(如DNA甲基化)的影响,能够极大地拓宽我们对这些疾病发生和发展的科学认识。因此,我们旨在通过在一个现有的基于人群的队列的后代中建立一个出生队列,来追踪哮喘、过敏及其发生的潜在风险因素在三代人中的发展过程。
方法/设计:1995年被招募参加儿童哮喘和过敏国际研究(ISAAC)第二阶段研究,随后又接受职业过敏风险研究(SOLAR)随访的2051名年轻成年人,自2009年起每半年被询问一次在此期间是否生育了孩子。如果报告已为人父母,父母将被邀请与其子女一起加入ACROSSOLAR队列。参与包括完成一份问卷,评估有关其子女怀孕过程和出生后第一年的一般及健康相关信息。随后,对这些孩子进行随访,直至小学年龄,此时可可靠地诊断哮喘和过敏。此外,将收集和分析用于表观遗传分析的DNA。然后将使用纵向数据分析技术,在考虑表观遗传学的情况下,评估生命早期暴露与儿童哮喘和过敏发病之间的潜在关联。
出生队列特别适合于阐明遗传易感性、表观遗传学、生命早期暴露以及基因-环境相互作用对哮喘和过敏发生及发展的影响。通过在现有队列的基础上开展研究,ACROSSOLAR提供了一个独特且具有成本效益的机会,以前瞻性和跨代的方式研究过敏性疾病的病因。