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The Puerto Rican Infant Metagenomic and Epidemiologic Study of Respiratory Outcomes (PRIMERO): Design and Baseline Characteristics for a Birth Cohort Study of Early-life Viral Respiratory Illnesses and Airway Dysfunction in Puerto Rican Children.

Authors :
Witonsky JI
Elhawary JR
Eng C
Oh SS
Salazar S
Contreras MG
Medina V
Secor EA
Zhang P
Everman JL
Fairbanks-Mahnke A
Pruesse E
Sajuthi SP
Chang CH
Guerrero TR
Fuentes KC
Lopez N
Montanez-Lopez CA
Otero RA
Rivera RC
Rodriguez L
Vazquez G
Hu D
Huntsman S
Jackson ND
Li Y
Morin A
Nieves NA
Rios C
Serrano G
Williams BJM
Ziv E
Moore CM
Sheppard D
Burchard EG
Seibold MA
Rodriguez Santana JR
Source :
MedRxiv : the preprint server for health sciences [medRxiv] 2024 Apr 16. Date of Electronic Publication: 2024 Apr 16.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Epidemiologic studies demonstrate an association between early-life respiratory illnesses (RIs) and the development of childhood asthma. However, it remains uncertain whether these children are predisposed to both conditions or if early-life RIs induce alterations in airway function, immune responses, or other human biology that contribute to the development of asthma. Puerto Rican children experience a disproportionate burden of early-life RIs and asthma, making them an important population for investigating this complex interplay. PRIMERO, the Puerto Rican Infant Metagenomics and Epidemiologic Study of Respiratory Outcomes , recruited pregnant women and their newborns to investigate how the airways develop in early life among infants exposed to different viral RIs, and will thus provide a critical understanding of childhood asthma development. As the first asthma birth cohort in Puerto Rico, PRIMERO will prospectively follow 2,100 term healthy infants. Collected samples include post-term maternal peripheral blood, infant cord blood, the child's peripheral blood at the year two visit, and the child's nasal airway epithelium, collected using minimally invasive nasal swabs, at birth, during RIs over the first two years of life, and at annual healthy visits until age five. Herein, we describe the study's design, population, recruitment strategy, study visits and procedures, and primary outcomes.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
MedRxiv : the preprint server for health sciences
Accession number :
38699325
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1101/2024.04.15.24305359