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Cohort profile: the ECHO prenatal and early childhood pathways to health consortium (ECHO-PATHWAYS)
- Source :
- BMJ open, vol 12, iss 10
- Publication Year :
- 2022
- Publisher :
- eScholarship, University of California, 2022.
-
Abstract
- PurposeExposures early in life, beginning in utero, have long-term impacts on mental and physical health. The ECHO prenatal and early childhood pathways to health consortium (ECHO-PATHWAYS) was established to examine the independent and combined impact of pregnancy and childhood chemical exposures and psychosocial stressors on child neurodevelopment and airway health, as well as the placental mechanisms underlying these associations.ParticipantsThe ECHO-PATHWAYS consortium harmonises extant data from 2684 mother–child dyads in three pregnancy cohort studies (CANDLE [Conditions Affecting Neurocognitive Development and Learning in Early Childhood], TIDES [The Infant Development and Environment Study] and GAPPS [Global Alliance to Prevent Prematurity and Stillbirth]) and collects prospective data under a unified protocol. Study participants are socioeconomically diverse and include a large proportion of Black families (38% Black and 51% White), often under-represented in research. Children are currently 5–15 years old. New data collection includes multimodal assessments of primary outcomes (airway health and neurodevelopment) and exposures (air pollution, phthalates and psychosocial stress) as well as rich covariate characterisation. ECHO-PATHWAYS is compiling extant and new biospecimens in a central biorepository and generating the largest placental transcriptomics data set to date (N=1083).Findings to dateEarly analyses demonstrate adverse associations of prenatal exposure to air pollution, phthalates and maternal stress with early childhood airway outcomes and neurodevelopment. Placental transcriptomics work suggests that phthalate exposure alters placental gene expression, pointing to mechanistic pathways for the developmental toxicity of phthalates. We also observe associations between prenatal maternal stress and placental corticotropin releasing hormone, a marker of hormonal activation during pregnancy relevant for child health. Other publications describe novel methods for examining exposure mixtures and the development of a national spatiotemporal model of ambient outdoor air pollution.Future plansThe first wave of data from the unified protocol (child age 8–9) is nearly complete. Future work will leverage these data to examine the combined impact of early life social and chemical exposures on middle childhood health outcomes and underlying placental mechanisms.
- Subjects :
- fetal medicine
Pediatric Research Initiative
Adolescent
Corticotropin-Releasing Hormone
Placenta
Clinical Sciences
Reproductive health and childbirth
Basic Behavioral and Social Science
Cohort Studies
Pregnancy
Clinical Research
2.3 Psychological
Behavioral and Social Science
Humans
2.2 Factors relating to the physical environment
2.1 Biological and endogenous factors
Climate-Related Exposures and Conditions
Prospective Studies
Conditions Affecting the Embryonic and Fetal Periods
Aetiology
Child
Preschool
Pediatric
Other Medical and Health Sciences
Prevention
public health
Neurosciences
General Medicine
Environmental Exposure
Perinatal Period - Conditions Originating in Perinatal Period
Mental Health
Good Health and Well Being
Child, Preschool
Prenatal Exposure Delayed Effects
paediatric thoracic medicine
Public Health and Health Services
developmental neurology & neurodisability
Female
social and economic factors
Subjects
Details
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- BMJ open, vol 12, iss 10
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....84a84f65e9cf085b298680bc884e71e2