Population Policy and Practice, University College London Institute of Child Health, London, UK
Neonatal Medicine, School of Public Health, Imperial College London, London, UK.
BMJ Open. 2024 Aug 19;14(8):e089510. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2024-089510.
Over 3000 infants suffer a brain injury around the time of birth every year in England. Although these injuries can have important implications for children and their families, our understanding of how these injuries affect children's lives is limited.
The aim of the CHERuB study (Childhood Health and Educational outcomes afteR perinatal Brain injury) is to investigate longitudinal childhood health and educational outcomes after perinatal brain injury through the creation of a population-matched cohort study. This study will use the Department of Health and Social Care definition of perinatal brain injury which includes infants with intracranial haemorrhage, preterm white matter injury, hypoxic ischaemic encephalopathy, perinatal stroke, central nervous system infections, seizures and kernicterus. All children born with a perinatal brain injury in England between 2008 and 2019 will be included (n=54 176) and two matched comparator groups of infants without brain injury will be created: a preterm control group identified from the National Neonatal Research Data Set and a term/late preterm control group identified using birth records. The national health, education and social care records of these infants will be linked to ascertain their longitudinal childhood outcomes between 2008 and 2023. This cohort will include approximately 170 000 children. The associations between perinatal brain injuries and survival without neurosensory impairment, neurodevelopmental impairments, chronic health conditions and mental health conditions throughout childhood will be examined using regression methods and time-to-event analyses.
This study has West London Research Ethics Committee and Confidential Advisory Group approval (20/LO/1023 and 22/CAG/0068 issued 20/10/2022). Findings will be published in open-access journals and publicised via the CHERuB study website, social media accounts and our charity partners.
在英格兰,每年有超过 3000 名婴儿在出生时遭受脑损伤。尽管这些损伤对儿童及其家庭可能有重要影响,但我们对这些损伤如何影响儿童生活的了解有限。
CHERuB 研究(围产期脑损伤后儿童健康和教育结果)的目的是通过创建一个人群匹配的队列研究来调查围产期脑损伤后儿童的纵向健康和教育结果。该研究将使用卫生和社会保健部对围产期脑损伤的定义,其中包括颅内出血、早产儿脑白质损伤、缺氧缺血性脑病、围产期中风、中枢神经系统感染、癫痫发作和核黄疸的婴儿。所有在英格兰出生的 2008 年至 2019 年间患有围产期脑损伤的婴儿都将被纳入(n=54176),并创建两个无脑损伤的匹配对照组婴儿:一个是从国家新生儿研究数据集中确定的早产儿对照组,另一个是通过出生记录确定的足月/晚期早产儿对照组。这些婴儿的国家健康、教育和社会护理记录将被链接,以确定他们在 2008 年至 2023 年期间的纵向儿童结局。该队列将包括大约 170000 名儿童。将使用回归方法和生存时间分析来检查围产期脑损伤与儿童期无神经感觉障碍、神经发育障碍、慢性健康状况和心理健康状况之间的关系。
本研究已获得西伦敦伦理委员会和保密咨询小组的批准(20/LO/1023 和 22/CAG/0068 于 2022 年 10 月 20 日发布)。研究结果将发表在开放获取期刊上,并通过 CHERuB 研究网站、社交媒体账户和慈善合作伙伴进行宣传。