Observational Research in Childhood Infectious Diseases Study
NCT ID: NCT01304914
Last Updated: 2016-03-31
Study Results
The study team has not published outcome measurements, participant flow, or safety data for this trial yet. Check back later for updates.
Basic Information
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COMPLETED
165 participants
OBSERVATIONAL
2010-08-31
2014-11-30
Brief Summary
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Detailed Description
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Women are to be recruited antenatally over a period of two years from study commencement (mid-2010). These hospitals serve communities from the north of Brisbane, a city of almost 2 million people, and every year each has roughly 5,200 (RBWH) and 1,700 (North West) annual deliveries respectively. The investigators will follow 138 infants from birth until their second birthday. Where a family drops out of the study or is lost to follow-up, they will be replaced to maintain overall person-time for the study.
The progressive 2 year recruitment plan allows for seasonal and year-to-year variation in respiratory virus activity. Eligible infants will be healthy term babies without conditions that predispose to more frequent or severe infectious episodes.
Parents will keep a simple, daily, infection symptom diary, completed using tick boxes and numbers, which the investigators will request be returned on a 4-weekly basis. A similar diary was used for a 12-month cohort study conducted in Melbourne (2003-2004) with excellent return rate and acceptability by study families.
Study families are to be contacted monthly by their preferred method of communication (telephone, SMS, or email) to encourage continued performance of study tasks and answer study related questions.
Parents will be asked to identify acute respiratory illness (ARI) and acute gastroenteritis (AGE) in study children. These are defined as:
* ARI: presence of at least one yellow OR at least two blue symptoms on a single day; and
* AGE: three or more watery or looser-than-normal stools OR vomiting on a single day.
When an ARI or AGE occur, parents will be asked to complete an impact diary for the duration of illness. Parents will be asked to contact us in the event of hospitalisation due to any cause. Parents will be asked to provide consent for hospital/GP release of information to allow study staff to collect details of episodes of care.
Cord blood will also be collected at birth and stored for later identification of pathogen-specific antibodies and immune mediators linked to disease susceptibility. A respiratory and stool swab will be collected from study neonates within one day of birth. At this visit, the investigators will collect a respiratory swab from the parent/s of the child - this will allow us to compare presence of pathogens in the neonate and parents, and will be the only time parents will be swabbed. Parents will be trained in the process of collecting the study swabs at this visit. All material and instructions required for this process will be provided to parents at no cost. Telephone and visiting support to assist and guide specimen collection will be available for study parents at all stages during the study.
Parents will be asked to routinely collect two specimens on the same day of the week as the initial visit, weekly until the end of the study. The specimens are:
* a combined anterior nares swab, collected from both nostrils using a single, rayon-budded swab. The swab comes with its own transport tube containing a VTM-soaked sponge in the base. The completed swab is placed in the transport tube and the VTM sponge is squeezed to bath the swab; and
* a stool swab from a dirty nappy, collected and handled using the swab similar to the anterior nares swab.
Both swabs are mailed back to Qpid Laboratory as soon as possible after collection, using pre-addressed, reply post, padded envelopes.
All specimens will be batch tested for a variety of pathogens using validated PCR methods developed at Qpid. Samples from children with ARI or AGE for whom a known agent cannot be identified, will be made available for further investigations for the presence of as yet unidentified viruses.
Conditions
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Study Design
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COHORT
PROSPECTIVE
Study Groups
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Healthy, term-delivered babies
No interventions assigned to this group
Eligibility Criteria
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Inclusion Criteria
* written informed consent from pregnant woman who is available for telephone contact for the duration of the study, and not planning to move out of the study area
* parent willing to collect a weekly anterior nasal specimen and stool (nappy) specimen from the study child and return to study site via mail
* parent or guardian with sufficient English language skills to complete study diaries and perform study tasks as required
Exclusion Criteria
* children with chronic pulmonary or cardiovascular disorders
* children with chronic metabolic disorders (such as, but not limited to, diabetes mellitus, renal dysfunction, haemoglobinopathies)
* children with immune system disorders (such as HIV/AIDS or receiving immune system suppressing medications)
* children with other chronic illnesses whose enrollment is deemed by the investigators to make it inappropriate to enroll them onto, or to continue in, the study
7 Days
ALL
Yes
Sponsors
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Royal Brisbane and Women's Hospital
OTHER_GOV
The University of Queensland
OTHER
Responsible Party
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Dr Stephen Lambert
Senior Research Fellow
Principal Investigators
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Keith Grimwood, MD
Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR
The University of Queensland
Theo P Sloots, PhD
Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR
The University of Queensland
Michael D Nissen, FRACP
Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR
The University of Queensland
Stephen B Lambert, PhD
Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR
The University of Queensland
Locations
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Royal Brisbane and Women's Hospital
Brisbane, Queensland, Australia
Northwest Private Hospital
Everton Park, Queensland, Australia
Countries
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References
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Saha S, Fozzard N, Grimwood K, Lambert SB, Ware RS. The Ages When Healthy Children Are First Colonized by Three Common Potentially Pathogenic Bacteria: A Birth Cohort Study. Pediatr Infect Dis J. 2025 Apr 3;44(9):907-909. doi: 10.1097/INF.0000000000004798.
El-Heneidy A, Grimwood K, Mihala G, Lambert S, Ware RS. Epidemiology of Norovirus in the First 2 Years of Life in an Australian Community-based Birth Cohort. Pediatr Infect Dis J. 2022 Nov 1;41(11):878-884. doi: 10.1097/INF.0000000000003667. Epub 2022 Oct 11.
Wang CYT, Ware RS, Lambert SB, Mhango LP, Tozer S, Day R, Grimwood K, Bialasiewicz S. Parechovirus A Infections in Healthy Australian Children During the First 2 Years of Life: A Community-based Longitudinal Birth Cohort Study. Clin Infect Dis. 2020 Jun 24;71(1):116-127. doi: 10.1093/cid/ciz761.
Ye S, Whiley DM, Ware RS, Kirkwood CD, Lambert SB, Grimwood K. Multivalent Rotavirus Vaccine and Wild-type Rotavirus Strain Shedding in Australian Infants: A Birth Cohort Study. Clin Infect Dis. 2018 Apr 17;66(9):1411-1418. doi: 10.1093/cid/cix1022.
Sarna M, Alsaleh A, Lambert SB, Ware RS, Mhango LP, Mackay IM, Whiley DM, Sloots TP, Grimwood K. Respiratory Viruses in Neonates: A Prospective, Community-based Birth Cohort Study. Pediatr Infect Dis J. 2016 Dec;35(12):1355-1357. doi: 10.1097/INF.0000000000001316.
Lambert SB, Ware RS, Cook AL, Maguire FA, Whiley DM, Bialasiewicz S, Mackay IM, Wang D, Sloots TP, Nissen MD, Grimwood K. Observational Research in Childhood Infectious Diseases (ORChID): a dynamic birth cohort study. BMJ Open. 2012 Oct 31;2(6):e002134. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2012-002134. Print 2012.
Other Identifiers
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HREC10/QRCH16
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: org_study_id
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