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Active Not RecruitingNCT03531658

Singapore PREconception Study of Long-Term Maternal and Child Outcomes

Singapore PREconception Study of Long-Term Maternal and Child Outcomes (S-PRESTO)

Status
Active Not Recruiting
Phase
Study type
Observational
Enrollment
1,054 (actual)
Sponsor
KK Women's and Children's Hospital · Other Government
Sex
All
Age
Healthy volunteers
Accepted

Summary

We aim to test the following primary hypothesis that nutrition, lifestyle, and maternal emotional health prior to pregnancy and/or during the first trimester alter the expression of metabolic or neurodevelopmental endophenotypes with accompanying effects on the epigenome/transcriptome of the offspring.

Detailed description

It is now evident that prenatal stage represents a window of susceptibility for early life exposure that can have an effect on developing fetus, with potential long-lasting consequences for offspring growth and development. Emerging research suggest that the environmental modulation of tissue development and function may even occur both before and soon after conception but as yet, limited study has been conducted to investigate the relationship of preconception and early prenatal life conditions, including nutrition, lifestyle and environmental factors, with maternal and offspring health. This prospective preconception cohort study recruited 1054 women who plan to get pregnant. The investigators will assess the women metabolically, nutritionally and epigenetically, then monitor them from their first missed menses with nutritional surveys and assays and repeated bio-sampling to birth followed by assessment in the women of lactation and lactational nutrition. Biochemical and molecular analyses will be done on the cord and placenta at birth and in buccal smears at frequent postnatal intervals. The women's partners will also be recruited on consent. Phenotypic measures of body composition and core neurodevelopmental measures will be followed in the offspring from birth until 9 years of age. Metabolic and mental health of women will also be measured from preconception until 9 years postpartum. At delivery phase, there are 373 mother-child pairs with 80% of fathers enrolled in the study as well. This study allows understanding of the potential triggers during early life environment, including nutritional and lifestyle factors, emotional wellbeing, socio-economic status, microbiome, pollutants, metabolomics and epigenetics, which can independently or collectively influence metabolic and neural phenotypes in the offspring and mother. This will help to establish what future directions may hold in terms of possible preventive strategies that may lead to decreased prevalence of metabolic diseases and mental/ neurological disorders.

Conditions

Timeline

Start date
2015-02-27
Primary completion
2029-12-01
Completion
2029-12-01
First posted
2018-05-22
Last updated
2025-06-18

Locations

1 site across 1 country: Singapore

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT03531658. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.