Rio Birth Cohort Study on Environmental Exposure and Childhood Development – PIPA Project

Background/Objective: As a developing country, Brazil presents a wide range of environmental risks that can constitute hazards to child health. The country also presents different socio-economic-cultural conditions that could be responsible for determining different vulnerability and susceptibility...

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Main Authors: Carmen Ildes R. Fróes Asmus, Arnaldo Prata Barbosa, Armando Meyer, Nataly Damasceno, Ana Cristina Simões Rosa, Roberto Medronho, Antônio Jose Ledo A. da Cunha, Josino Costa Moreira, Thatiana V. R. de B. Fernandes, Marlos Martins, Ronir Raggio Luiz, Volney de Magalhães Câmara
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Levy Library Press 2020-06-01
Series:Annals of Global Health
Online Access:https://annalsofglobalhealth.org/articles/2709
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spelling doaj-50c810f3f2cd40e68a01bbd02404f4232020-11-25T03:46:11ZengLevy Library PressAnnals of Global Health2214-99962020-06-0186110.5334/aogh.27092477Rio Birth Cohort Study on Environmental Exposure and Childhood Development – PIPA ProjectCarmen Ildes R. Fróes Asmus0Arnaldo Prata Barbosa1Armando Meyer2Nataly Damasceno3Ana Cristina Simões Rosa4Roberto Medronho5Antônio Jose Ledo A. da Cunha6Josino Costa Moreira7Thatiana V. R. de B. Fernandes8Marlos Martins9Ronir Raggio Luiz10Volney de Magalhães Câmara11Federal University of Rio de Janeiro, School of Medicine, Rio de JaneiroFederal University of Rio de Janeiro, School of Medicine, Rio de JaneiroFederal University of Rio de Janeiro, Public Health Institute, Rio de JaneiroFederal University of Rio de JaneiroOswaldo Cruz Foundation, National School of Public Health, Rio de JaneiroFederal University of Rio de Janeiro, School of Medicine, Rio de JaneiroFederal University of Rio de Janeiro, School of Medicine, Rio de JaneiroOswaldo Cruz Foundation, National School of Public Health, Rio de JaneiroFederal University of Rio de Janeiro, Public Health Institute, Rio de JaneiroFederal University of Rio de Janeiro, School of Medicine, Rio de JaneiroFederal University of Rio de Janeiro, Public Health Institute, Rio de JaneiroFederal University of Rio de Janeiro, Public Health Institute, Rio de JaneiroBackground/Objective: As a developing country, Brazil presents a wide range of environmental risks that can constitute hazards to child health. The country also presents different socio-economic-cultural conditions that could be responsible for determining different vulnerability and susceptibility levels for the population, which can potentiate the effects of the environmental pollutants. The Rio Birth Cohort Study (PIPA project) is a prospective maternal-infant health study, hosted in the city of Rio de Janeiro (Southeastern Brazil), designed to investigate separate and combined effects of environmental chemical pollutants, as well as the interactions between these exposures and sociocultural environment and epigenetic patterns. This paper presents the learned lessons and strategies to address the shortcomings detected from this pilot study. Methods: The study population will be all children born at the Federal University of Rio de Janeiro Maternity Hospital from July 1st, 2020 to June 30th, 2021. The estimated population is of 2,500 children. The study will collect social, demographic, and health information from pregnant women and their children up to four years of age. Biological samples from both mothers and newborns will be collected to assess metal, pesticide and plasticizer exposure. All newborns will have their landmarks of physical, neurological, psychological, and cognitive development recorded at specific ages. Findings: A pilot study was carried out between September 2017 and August 2018, totaling 142 enrolled pregnant women, leading to 135 (95%) births and the collection of umbilical cord (126–93%,) and mother (139–98%) blood samples, as well as both mother (142–100%) and newborn (54–40%) urine samples and newborn meconium samples (117–86.7%). Conclusions: The study proposes a comprehensive assessment of pre- and postnatal exposure to environmental chemicals at multiple time points in a population living in a highly urbanized developing country. As far as we know, this is the only birth cohort in Brazil specifically designed for this purpose.https://annalsofglobalhealth.org/articles/2709
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Carmen Ildes R. Fróes Asmus
Arnaldo Prata Barbosa
Armando Meyer
Nataly Damasceno
Ana Cristina Simões Rosa
Roberto Medronho
Antônio Jose Ledo A. da Cunha
Josino Costa Moreira
Thatiana V. R. de B. Fernandes
Marlos Martins
Ronir Raggio Luiz
Volney de Magalhães Câmara
spellingShingle Carmen Ildes R. Fróes Asmus
Arnaldo Prata Barbosa
Armando Meyer
Nataly Damasceno
Ana Cristina Simões Rosa
Roberto Medronho
Antônio Jose Ledo A. da Cunha
Josino Costa Moreira
Thatiana V. R. de B. Fernandes
Marlos Martins
Ronir Raggio Luiz
Volney de Magalhães Câmara
Rio Birth Cohort Study on Environmental Exposure and Childhood Development – PIPA Project
Annals of Global Health
author_facet Carmen Ildes R. Fróes Asmus
Arnaldo Prata Barbosa
Armando Meyer
Nataly Damasceno
Ana Cristina Simões Rosa
Roberto Medronho
Antônio Jose Ledo A. da Cunha
Josino Costa Moreira
Thatiana V. R. de B. Fernandes
Marlos Martins
Ronir Raggio Luiz
Volney de Magalhães Câmara
author_sort Carmen Ildes R. Fróes Asmus
title Rio Birth Cohort Study on Environmental Exposure and Childhood Development – PIPA Project
title_short Rio Birth Cohort Study on Environmental Exposure and Childhood Development – PIPA Project
title_full Rio Birth Cohort Study on Environmental Exposure and Childhood Development – PIPA Project
title_fullStr Rio Birth Cohort Study on Environmental Exposure and Childhood Development – PIPA Project
title_full_unstemmed Rio Birth Cohort Study on Environmental Exposure and Childhood Development – PIPA Project
title_sort rio birth cohort study on environmental exposure and childhood development – pipa project
publisher Levy Library Press
series Annals of Global Health
issn 2214-9996
publishDate 2020-06-01
description Background/Objective: As a developing country, Brazil presents a wide range of environmental risks that can constitute hazards to child health. The country also presents different socio-economic-cultural conditions that could be responsible for determining different vulnerability and susceptibility levels for the population, which can potentiate the effects of the environmental pollutants. The Rio Birth Cohort Study (PIPA project) is a prospective maternal-infant health study, hosted in the city of Rio de Janeiro (Southeastern Brazil), designed to investigate separate and combined effects of environmental chemical pollutants, as well as the interactions between these exposures and sociocultural environment and epigenetic patterns. This paper presents the learned lessons and strategies to address the shortcomings detected from this pilot study. Methods: The study population will be all children born at the Federal University of Rio de Janeiro Maternity Hospital from July 1st, 2020 to June 30th, 2021. The estimated population is of 2,500 children. The study will collect social, demographic, and health information from pregnant women and their children up to four years of age. Biological samples from both mothers and newborns will be collected to assess metal, pesticide and plasticizer exposure. All newborns will have their landmarks of physical, neurological, psychological, and cognitive development recorded at specific ages. Findings: A pilot study was carried out between September 2017 and August 2018, totaling 142 enrolled pregnant women, leading to 135 (95%) births and the collection of umbilical cord (126–93%,) and mother (139–98%) blood samples, as well as both mother (142–100%) and newborn (54–40%) urine samples and newborn meconium samples (117–86.7%). Conclusions: The study proposes a comprehensive assessment of pre- and postnatal exposure to environmental chemicals at multiple time points in a population living in a highly urbanized developing country. As far as we know, this is the only birth cohort in Brazil specifically designed for this purpose.
url https://annalsofglobalhealth.org/articles/2709
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