Miliku Kozeta, Reyna Myrtha E, Medeleanu Maria, Dai Ruixue, Dubeau Aimee, Lefebvre Diana L, Wright Kim, Dawod Bassel, Beck Marshall, Brooks Elissa, Kobor Michael, Duan Qingling, Brook Jeffrey R, Lou Wendy, Brinkman Fiona S L, Winsor Geoffrey L, Cook Justin, Becker Allan B, Simons Elinor, Mandhane Piushkumar J, Moraes Theo J, Azad Meghan B, Sears Malcolm R, Turvey Stuart E, Subbarao Padmaja
Department of Nutritional Sciences, Temerty Faculty of Medicine, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
Department of Medicine, Faculty of Health Sciences, McMaster University, Hamilton, Ontario, Canada.
Am J Epidemiol. 2024 Oct 11. doi: 10.1093/aje/kwae397.
The CHILD Cohort Study is an active multi-center longitudinal, prospective, population pregnancy cohort study following Canadian infants from fetal life until adulthood. We hypothesized that early life physical and psychosocial environments interact with biological factors (e.g. immunologic, genetic, physiologic, and metabolic) influencing burdensome non-communicable disease outcomes, including asthma and allergic disorders, growth and development, cardio-metabolic health, and neurodevelopmental outcomes that manifest during the life-course. Detailed clinical and physiologic phenotyping at strategic intervals was complemented by environmental sampling, actigraphy and global positioning system measures, biological sampling including gut, breastmilk and nasal microbiome, nutritional studies, genetics, and epigenetic profiling. Of 3,454 families recruited from 2008 to 2012, study retention was 96.0% at 1-year, 93.2% at 5-years and 90.7% at 8-years. Data collection during the SARS-2 COVID-19 pandemic was partially completed via virtual visits. A sub-cohort was implemented, capturing detailed information on the prevalence and predictors of SARS-CoV-2 infection and the health and psychosocial impact of the pandemic on Canadian families. The 13-year clinical assessment launched in 2022 will be completed in 2025. Ultimately, the CHILD Cohort Study provides a data science platform designed to enable a deep understanding of early life factors associated with the development of chronic non-communicable diseases and multimorbidity.
儿童队列研究是一项活跃的多中心纵向、前瞻性人群妊娠队列研究,对加拿大婴儿从胎儿期直至成年期进行跟踪研究。我们假设,生命早期的身体和社会心理环境与生物因素(如免疫、遗传、生理和代谢因素)相互作用,影响包括哮喘和过敏性疾病、生长发育、心脏代谢健康以及生命过程中出现的神经发育结果等负担沉重的非传染性疾病结局。在关键时间间隔进行详细的临床和生理表型分析,并辅以环境采样、活动记录仪和全球定位系统测量、生物采样(包括肠道、母乳和鼻腔微生物组)、营养研究、遗传学和表观遗传学分析。在2008年至2012年招募的3454个家庭中,1年时的研究保留率为96.0%,5年时为93.2%,8年时为90.7%。在严重急性呼吸综合征冠状病毒2型(SARS-CoV-2)引发的2019冠状病毒病(COVID-19)大流行期间,部分数据收集通过虚拟访视完成。实施了一个亚队列研究,获取有关SARS-CoV-2感染的患病率和预测因素以及该大流行对加拿大家庭的健康和社会心理影响的详细信息。于2022年启动的13年临床评估将于2025年完成。最终,儿童队列研究提供了一个数据科学平台,旨在深入了解与慢性非传染性疾病和多病共存发展相关的生命早期因素。