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Nigel Paneth MD MPH

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Title: Nigel Paneth MD MPH


1
The National Childrens Study in
MichiganOpportunities for Obstetric Research
  • Nigel Paneth MD MPH
  • Pediatric Grand Rounds
  • William Beaumont Hospital
  • Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology
  • Sept 3, 2009
  • www.epi.msu.edu/faculty/paneth.htm

2
THE CHARGE FROM CONGRESS PL 106-310. Childrens
Health Act of 2000
  • The Director of NICHD shall establish a
    consortium from appropriate Federal agencies
    (including the CDC and EPA) to
  • (1) plan, develop, and implement a prospective
    longitudinal study, from birth to adulthood, to
    evaluate the effects of both chronic and
    intermittent exposures on child health and human
    development and
  • (2) investigate basic mechanisms of developmental
    disorders and environmental factors, both risk
    and protective, that influence health and
    developmental processes.

3
THE RESPONSEThe National Childrens Study
  • The NCS is a longitudinal study of a nationally
    representative sample of 100,000 children, their
    families, and their environment from before birth
    through age 21.
  • It is the largest longitudinal study of
    childrens health and development ever conducted
    in the U.S.
  • It may be the largest study combining all forms
    of measurement in depth (self-report, clinical
    examinations, biological samples) ever conducted
    on any human population.

4
WHY ARE PROSPECTIVE LONGITUDINAL STUDIES SO
VALUABLE?
  • If we know what happens to people before disease
    develops, we can figure out what causes disease
    and how disease can be prevented.
  • The Framingham Heart Study followed healthy
    adults for many years, and taught us that factors
    such as high blood pressure, diabetes, smoking
    and high cholesterol predispose to heart disease.
  • Applying those lessons has played a major role in
    the 60 reduction in the heart disease death
    rate, the 42 reduction in the overall death
    rate, and the extra 9 years of life attained
    since 1950 in the US.
  • The US needs a Framingham for kids!

5
WHAT IS BEING STUDIED?
6
SOME STUDY QUESTIONS OF INTEREST TO OBSTETRICIANS
  • Do assisted reproductive technologies (ART)
    increase the risk of fetal growth restriction,
    birth defects, and developmental disabilities?
  • Does impaired maternal glucose metabolism during
    pregnancy cause obesity in children?
  • Does pre-and post-natal exposure to
    endocrine-active environmental agents alter age
    at onset, duration, and completion of puberty?
  • Do inapparent infections contribute to risk of
    preterm delivery?

7
DATA TO BE COLLECTED PRIOR TO BIRTH
  • Study begins with a home visit prior to
    conception (when possible) or in the first
    trimester of pregnancy
  • Two additional clinic visits and three phone
    contacts during pregnancy.
  • In one of the clinic visits, a third trimester
    study ultrasound is obtained.

8
PRE-CONCEPTIONAL OR FIRST TRIMESTER HOME VISIT
  • Questionnaires Household Composition and
    Demographics Perceived Stress Social Support
    Family Processes Health Behaviors Diet and
    Toxicant Exposure through Food Environmental
    exposures
  • Biospecimens from both partners if available
    blood, hair, urine, nail, saliva. Vaginal fluid
    from woman.
  • Environmental samples dust, air, water, soil
  • Physical measurements height, weight, skinfolds,
    other anthropmetry, blood pressure

9
DATA TO BE COLLECTED AT BIRTH
10
DATA TO BE COLLECTED AFTER BIRTH
  • Home visits at six and twelve months and frequent
    phone contacts.
  • Further collection of biological and
    environmental specimens at home visits (breast
    milk, formula, baby urine)
  • Health surveys obtained at all visits
  • Abstraction of medical records
  • Continued follow-up to age 21, though full
    protocol beyond age 2.5 not yet developed

11
BIOLOGICAL STORAGE AND INFORMATICS
  • All material collected in the study
    (environmental and biological specimens) will be
    stored in duplicate in two locations
  • After aliquotting, an estimated 32 million
    specimens will be stored in the first seven years
    of the study, most in vapor phase liquid nitrogen
    at -150 or less.
  • All survey and health data collected will be
    protected by the highest levels of security

12
WHERE DOES THE NCS TAKE PLACE?
All Births in the Nation
4 million births in 3,141 counties
Sample of Study Locations
105 Locations
Selection of neighborhoods
Sample of Study Segments
All or a sample of households within neighborhoods
Study Households
All eligible women in the household
Study Women
13
7 Vanguard sites 29 Wave 1 sites 36 Wave
2 sites 15 Wave 3 sites 18 unassigned sites
TOTAL 105 SITES
14
HOW ARE PARTICIPANTS ENROLLED?
  • In sampled segments of counties (specific
    neighborhoods selected to be representative of
    the counties), all women of child-bearing age are
    contacted first by mail, then phone, then in
    person.
  • If the woman is at high risk of pregnancy or in
    the first trimester, consenting and enrollment
    takes place at first contact. Otherwise,
    enrollment is deferred but contact is maintained
    with the woman.
  • Surveillance of prenatal care sites is used to
    detect first-trimester pregnant women from
    segments.
  • Infants can be enrolled at birth if mother lives
    in segment and was not previously enrolled.

15
WHEN DOES THE STUDY TAKE PLACE?
  • 105 study locations to enroll in four waves
    Vanguard, and Waves 1 -3.
  • Seven Vanguard locations began enrolling in 2009.
  • Wave 1 (includes Wayne) to start in 2011
  • Wave 2 (includes Lenawee and Grand Traverse) to
    start in 2012
  • Wave 3 (includes Macomb and Genesee) to start in
    2013

16
WORK BEFORE ENROLLMENT
  • Selection of segments
  • Estimating N of births to obtain 250 births
    per county for each of four years
  • Aiming for county representativeness
  • Engaging the community
  • Making arrangement with hospitals and
    prenatal care providers
  • Dealing with IRBs
  • Hiring and training staff

17
The Michigan Alliance for the National
Childrens Study (MANCS)
18
Michigans 5 NCS Study Counties
WAVE 1 Wayne WAVE 2 Grand Traverse
Lenawee WAVE 3 Genesee Macomb
19
THE FIVE MANCS PARTICIPATING INSTITUTIONS
  • Henry Ford Health System (HFHS)
  • Michigan Department of Community Health (MDCH)
  • Michigan State University (MSU)
  • University of Michigan (UM)
  • Wayne State University (WSU) Childrens Hospital
    of Michigan (CHM)
  • Plus the health departments of each of the
  • five counties

20
CHALLENGES IN CONDUCTING THE NCS
  • Population-based survey research has rarely, if
    ever, been combined with data collection in
    clinical settings. Yet from identifying
    non-pregnant women at home
  • Pregnancies must be identified in the first
    trimester
  • Births must be identified when they occur in any
    hospital in which a segment woman delivers
  • Intense protocol
  • Many IRBs to obtain consent from
  • Increasing resistance to general population
    medical research. We also cannot take
    physicians help for granted.

21
A MANCS IRB
  • We are trying to get a single IRB in Michigan
    to review all MANCS protocols (including any
    adjunct studies)
  • All institutions and hospitals would send
    representatives to this IRB
  • MSU is setting up a special IRB for large,
    multicenter studies in Michigan, which would
    review all MANCS-related protocols
  • Other four institutions have agreed to this
    arrangement

22
OBSTETRIC PROVIDERS PLAY A KEY ROLE
  • In helping us to ascertain women in prenatal
    care
  • In helping us to collect birth specimens

23
ID LIKE TO INTRODUCE -
  • Gwen Norman RN, who is our hospital negotiator
    who is in charge of
  • communications with hospitals
  • communications with prenatal care providers

24
PREGNANCY ASCERTAINMENT VIA PRENATAL CARE
PROVIDERS
  • We plan surveillance in prenatal care to
    identify women from the study segments
  • We will provide address-matching software to
    clinics and providers (or an 800 number to call)
    to identify women eligible for the NCS
  • We will then need providers to alert us to the
    presence of NCS-eligible women

25
LABOR ASCERTAINMENT BY HOSPITALS
  • We will develop a system by which hospitals will
    notify us if an eligible woman is admitted in
    labor.
  • We will also develop arrangements with each
    hospital to collect the required specimens
  • We spend a great deal of time working to bring
    hospitals on board.

26
HELPING WOMEN WITH THE PROTOCOL THE PARTICIPANT
ADVOCATE COORDINATOR (PAC)
  • We budgeted an additional staff member, the PAC.
    This is a woman from the community with
    experience of pregnancy and labor issues whose
    role is to assist the participant to complete the
    protocol. She does not collect data (though she
    may help with birth collections)
  • She keeps in touch with the participant reminding
    her of the protocol requirements
  • The PAC will go with subjects to study visits,
    and to LD with mother, if required
  • In Wayne County, we have one PAC per 30 women per
    7 months (from first trimester visit to delivery)

27
HOW IS BEAUMONT INVOLVED?
  • In 2005, 23 of all Wayne resident births
    delivered outside of Wayne County
  • Beaumont Hospital (Royal Oak) was the third
    largest deliverer of Wayne County births outside
    of Wayne County, with 803 Wayne County births (3
    of all Wayne County births)
  • Therefore Beaumont Hospital would be expected to
    be the birth hospital for 30 study births
  • It is likely that some of you see Wayne County
    women in prenatal care

28
ADJUNCT STUDIES
  • Not every hypothesis in the childrens study
    needs 100,000 subjects!
  • A great deal of useful work could be done with
    our 5,000 Michigan participants or even
    sub-samples of them
  • The NCS is encouraging special studies of smaller
    groups of participants to answer special
    questions of interest
  • Given the very large amount of obstetric data and
    samples being collected, this could be a great
    opportunity to answer questions of interest to
    obstetricians.
  • If you would like to develop an adjunct study or
    participate in one, please contact me at
    paneth_at_msu.edu

29
WILL YOU HELP US WITH A BRIEF SURVEY?
  • The survey you have received will soon be sent
    to all obstetric providers in Wayne County. It is
    designed to learn about prenatal care and
    delivery practices and how they can intersect
    with the NCS.
  • It would help us a great deal if you could take
    five minutes now to complete this survey.
  • We would also like to know how to contact you
    electronically so that we can identify NCS
    participants from Wayne who might be seen in your
    practice, so we ask for your email address.
  • Many thanks in advance!

30
EXTRA SLIDES FROM HERE ON
31
COMMUNITY ENGAGEMENT IS KEY
  • We must make sure that women know about the NCS
    in our communities.
  • We must make sure that people women trust (health
    care providers, religious and political leaders)
    also know about the study.
  • We must make sure that women get a positive image
    of the NCS.
  • We must make the value of the NCS to the
    community is clear.
  • We should measure these attitudes periodically to
    see how well we are doing.

32
PILOT WORK WITH PREGNANT WOMEN IN GRAND RAPIDS,
MI SUMMER 2006
  • Provider attitudes
  • Mudd L et al MCH Journal 2008 12(6)684-91
  • Attitudes of pregnant women
  • Nechuta S et al Paed Perinat Epid
    200923424-30.

33
PRENATAL CARE STAFF WILLINGNESS TO HELP IN NCS
34
DELIVERY ROOM STAFF WILLINGNESS TO HELP IN NCS
35
PRENATAL AND DELIVERY STAFF BARRIERS TO THE NCS
36
PREGNANT WOMENS ACCEPTANCE OF NCS PROCEDURES
WITH AND WITHOUT COMPENSATION
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