Cohort profile update: The Canadian Maternal–Infant Research on Environmental Chemicals Child Development study (MIREC‐CD PLUS)

Author:

Fisher Mandy1ORCID,Muckle Gina2ORCID,Lanphear Bruce3,Arbuckle Tye E.1,Braun Joseph M.4ORCID,Zidek Angelika5,Vélez Maria P.6ORCID,Lupien Nicole7,Bastien Stephanie7,Ashley‐Martin Jillian1,Oulhote Youssef8,Borghese Michael M.1,Walker Mark9,Asztalos Elizabeth1011,Bouchard Maryse F.712,Booij Linda71314,Palmert Mark R.1011,Morrison Katherine M.15,Cummings Elizabeth A.16,Khatchadourian Karine17,Panagiotopoulos Constadina18ORCID,Glendon Gord19,Shutt Robin1,Abdul‐Fatah Ammanie1ORCID,Seal Kelsey1,Fraser William D.20

Affiliation:

1. Environmental Health Science and Research Bureau Health Canada Ottawa Ontario Canada

2. Laval Université Quebec Quebec Canada

3. Simon Fraser University Vancouver British Columbia Canada

4. Department of Epidemiology Brown University Providence Rhode Island USA

5. Existing Substances and Risk Assessment Bureau Health Canada Ottawa Ontario Canada

6. Queen's University Kingston Ontario Canada

7. Sainte‐Justine University Hospital Research Center Montreal Quebec Canada

8. Department of Epidemiology and Biostatistics, School of Public Health and Health Sciences University of Massachusetts Boston Massachusetts USA

9. The Ottawa Hospital Research Institute Ottawa Ontario Canada

10. Department of Pediatrics, Hospital for Sick Children University of Toronto Toronto Ontario Canada

11. Department of Physiology, Hospital for Sick Children University of Toronto Toronto Ontario Canada

12. Institut National de la Recherche Scientifique Montreal Quebec Canada

13. Department of Psychiatry McGill University Montreal Quebec Canada

14. Research Centre/Eating Disorders Continuum Douglas Mental Health University Institute Montreal Quebec Canada

15. Department of Pediatrics, Centre for Metabolism, Obesity and Diabetes Research McMaster University Hamilton Ontario Canada

16. Dalhousie University/IWK Health Halifax Nova Scotia Canada

17. Children's Hospital of Eastern Ontario (CHEO) Ottawa Ontario Canada

18. Endocrinology and Diabetes Unit, Department of Pediatrics, BC Children's Hospital University of British Columbia Vancouver British Columbia Canada

19. Ontario Cancer Genetics Network Lunenfeld‐Tanenbaum Research Institute Toronto Ontario Canada

20. Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Centre de Recherche du CHUS University of Sherbrooke Sherbrooke Québec Canada

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundThe pan‐Canadian Maternal–Infant Research on Environmental Chemicals (MIREC) study was established to determine whether maternal environmental chemical exposures were associated with adverse pregnancy outcomes in 2001 pregnant women.ObjectivesThe MIREC‐Child Development (CD PLUS) study followed this cohort with the goal of assessing the potential effects of prenatal exposures on anthropometry and neurodevelopment in early childhood.PopulationMIREC families with children between the ages of 15 months and 5 years who had agreed to be contacted for future research (n = 1459) were invited to participate in MIREC–CD PLUS which combines data collected from an online Maternal Self‐Administered Questionnaire with biomonitoring and neurodevelopment data collected from two in‐person visits.Preliminary ResultsBetween April 2013 and March 2015, 803 children participated in the Biomonitoring visit where we collected anthropometric measures, blood, and urine from the children. The Behavioural Assessment System for Children‐2, Behaviour Rating Inventory of Executive Function, MacArthur‐Bates Communicative Development Inventories and the Communication subscale of the Adaptive Behaviour Scale from the Bayley Scales of Infant and Toddler Development‐III are available on close to 900 children. There were 610 singleton children who completed in‐person visits for neurodevelopment assessments including the Social Responsiveness Scale, Wechsler Preschool Primary Scale of Intelligence‐III and NEuroPSYchological assessments (NEPSY). Currently, we are following the cohort into early adolescence to measure the impact of early life exposures on endocrine and metabolic function (MIREC–ENDO).ConclusionsData collection for the MIREC–CD PLUS study is complete and analysis of the data continues. We are now extending the follow‐up of the cohort into adolescence to measure the impact of early life exposures on endocrine and metabolic function (MIREC–ENDO). MIREC–CD PLUS is limited by loss to follow‐up and the fact that mothers are predominately of higher socioeconomic status and ‘White’ ethnicity, which limits our generalizability. However, the depth of biomonitoring and clinical measures in MIREC provides a platform to examine associations of prenatal, infancy and childhood exposures with child growth and development.

Funder

Health Canada

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health,Epidemiology

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