ID

45166

Description

Principal Investigator: Xiaobin Wang, MD, MPH, ScD, Zanvyl Krieger Professor, Director, Center on the Early Life Origins of Disease, Department of Population, Family and Reproductive Health, Johns Hopkins University Bloomberg School of Public Health, and Professor of Pediatrics, John Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD, USA MeSH: Infant, Premature,Premature Birth,Gestational Age https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/projects/gap/cgi-bin/study.cgi?study_id=phs000332 Preterm birth (PTB, born before 37 weeks of gestation) is a leading cause of neonatal mortality and post-natal morbidity. PTB affects one in nine all live births in the U.S. Notably, the highest rate of PTB occurs among African Americans (one in six). PTB is a complex trait, likely determined by multiple environmental and genetic factors and their interactions. We demonstrated strong familial aggregation of preterm and low birthweight in the US Blacks and Whites (Wang et al, NEJM, 1995) and conducted the largest candidate gene study of preterm birth at that time (Hao et al, HMG, 2004). We showed that a subset of mothers with certain metabolic gene variants are particularly vulnerable to the adverse effects of cigarette smoking on low birthweight and preterm births (Wang et al, JAMA, 2002). We also published a number of papers that examined the effect of maternal pre-pregnancy BMI, micronutrient status, stress and environmental toxins on the risk of preterm birth and related conditions. This project, supported by a grant from the NICHD (2R01HD41702, PI, Xiaobin Wang), aimed to conduct a genome-wide association study (GWAS) and apply advanced statistical methods to identify susceptibility loci of PTB in a predominantly urban low-income African American sample, a subset of the Boston Birth Cohort. PUBLIC HEALTH REVELANCE: We anticipate that this study will lead to the identification of novel genetic loci of PTB and gene-environment interactions. Such findings not only will provide important insights into mechanisms leading to PTB, but also may help identify women at high-risk of PTB, which in turn, may lead to the development of early and targeted interventions that can prevent PTB or mitigate the severity and consequences of PTB.

Lien

dbGaP study = phs000332

Mots-clés

  1. 25/08/2022 25/08/2022 - Chiara Middel
  2. 12/10/2022 12/10/2022 - Adrian Schulz
Détendeur de droits

Xiaobin Wang, MD, MPH, ScD, Zanvyl Krieger Professor, Director, Center on the Early Life Origins of Disease, Department of Population, Family and Reproductive Health, Johns Hopkins University Bloomberg School of Public Health, and Professor of Pediatrics, John Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD, USA

Téléchargé le

12 octobre 2022

DOI

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Licence

Creative Commons BY 4.0

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dbGaP phs000332 GWAS of Preterm Birth

Subject - Consent Information

pht002336
Description

pht002336

Subject ID
Description

SUBJID

Type de données

string

Alias
UMLS CUI [1,1]
C2348585
Consent group as determined by DAC
Description

CONSENT

Type de données

text

Alias
UMLS CUI [1,1]
C0021430
Source repository where subjects originate
Description

SUBJ_SOURCE

Type de données

string

Alias
UMLS CUI [1,1]
C3847505
UMLS CUI [1,2]
C0449416
Case - control status of the subject
Description

AFFECTION_STATUS

Type de données

text

Alias
UMLS CUI [1,1]
C3274646
Subject ID used in the Source Repository
Description

SOURCE_SUBJID

Type de données

string

Alias
UMLS CUI [1,1]
C2348585
UMLS CUI [1,2]
C0449416
UMLS CUI [1,3]
C3847505

Similar models

Subject - Consent Information

Name
Type
Description | Question | Decode (Coded Value)
Type de données
Alias
Item Group
pht002336
SUBJID
Item
Subject ID
string
C2348585 (UMLS CUI [1,1])
Item
Consent group as determined by DAC
text
C0021430 (UMLS CUI [1,1])
Code List
Consent group as determined by DAC
CL Item
Subjects did not participate in the study, did not complete a consent document and are included only for the pedigree structure and/or genotype controls, such as HapMap subjects (0)
CL Item
Disease-Specific (Preterm Birth, RD) (DS-PTB-RD) (1)
SUBJ_SOURCE
Item
Source repository where subjects originate
string
C3847505 (UMLS CUI [1,1])
C0449416 (UMLS CUI [1,2])
Item
Case - control status of the subject
text
C3274646 (UMLS CUI [1,1])
Code List
Case - control status of the subject
CL Item
Term - Control (1)
CL Item
Preterm - Case (2)
SOURCE_SUBJID
Item
Subject ID used in the Source Repository
string
C2348585 (UMLS CUI [1,1])
C0449416 (UMLS CUI [1,2])
C3847505 (UMLS CUI [1,3])

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