Study Results
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Basic Information
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COMPLETED
201 participants
OBSERVATIONAL
2016-05-31
2018-02-28
Brief Summary
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This study is following a birth cohort of children born to pregnant women enrolled in the study "Impact of malaria infection in pregnancy on fetal and newborn growth" (protocol OXTREC 14 08 and Mahidol 2009-003-01). In this cohort growth monitoring is conducted until 2 years of age using routine anthropometric measurements such as weight, length, arm and head circumference. A few additional tests will enhance the sensitivity of the study outcomes with minimal risk. These tests will include anthropometry, screening, nutrition questionnaire and neurodevelopmental assessment.
This study was funded by Wellcome Trust core funding, grant ref. number Wellcome Trust Major Overseas Program Grant no. 220211 (2020-2025)
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Detailed Description
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* Body fat composition (at birth, and monthly up to 4 months unless weight ≥ 8kg)
* Triceps and subscapular skinfold (at 1 and 2 years)
* Anemia, malaria and soil-transmitted helminths screening (every 3 months in first 12 months and 6-monthly 1-2 years)
* Buccal swab (at 1 and 2 years)
* Neurodevelopment (every 6 months)
* Food questionnaire (at 1 and 2 years)
Summary of results:
The beginning of the recruitment was delayed until the finalization and approval of the translated PIS/ICF; from then on, the recruitment was smooth. Overall, 201 children from the ongoing existing birth cohort were still present and eligible to participate in this part of the study; 173 completed 2 years of FUP 28 were lost. Data and samples from these 173 children were included in the analysis of a large, multi-center, study, the INTERBIO-21st.
The pooled findings show 1. Cognitive development, language, and visual skills at 2 years of age vary according to the trajectories of fetal cranial growth 2. There is a critical window period at 20-25 weeks gestational age when fetal cranial trajectories may diverge and when fetal abdominal circumference growth may accelerate or decelerate 3. Preterm newborn's growth and neurocognitive development vary according to their birth phenotype characteristics (i.e. those classified in the "birth infections" phenotype were at higher risk for poor scoring in fine and gross motor development compared to term newborns) 4. An indication of a greater increase in weight in proportion to height during the 2 first years of life if there was a faltering growth phenotype observed during gestation.
Maternal malaria and anemia's role in the development of children were evaluated specifically for this study site and included all the children followed up to one year of age. Preliminary results show that 48% of children are stunted at 2 years of age and that malaria and anemia independently are significant contributors to the decline in growth z-scores during infancy (manuscript in preparation); that 66% of children have anemia (HCT\<33%) in the first year of life, the median age for a first HCT\<33% is 4 months of age and that moderate, but not mild anemia in infancy reduces the median neurodevelopment score at year of age. Maternal anemia but not malaria is a factor contributing to increased risk of anemia in infants. Results were presented at local and regional and international conferences and were part of a MSc thesis.
Conditions
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Study Design
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COHORT
PROSPECTIVE
Eligibility Criteria
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Inclusion Criteria
* Able (in the Investigators opinion) to comply with study requirements
Exclusion Criteria
* Medical or congenital complications which would (in the investigator's opinion) make it difficult to comply with study requirements
* Aged older than 2 years
2 Years
ALL
Yes
Sponsors
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University of Oxford
OTHER
Responsible Party
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Locations
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Shoklo Malaria Research Unit
Mae Sot, Changwat Tak, Thailand
Countries
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Other Identifiers
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SMRU1504
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: org_study_id
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