Environmental influences on child health outcomes: cohorts of individuals born very preterm.


Journal

Pediatric research
ISSN: 1530-0447
Titre abrégé: Pediatr Res
Pays: United States
ID NLM: 0100714

Informations de publication

Date de publication:
04 2023
Historique:
received: 14 01 2022
accepted: 19 07 2022
revised: 27 05 2022
medline: 28 4 2023
pubmed: 11 8 2022
entrez: 10 8 2022
Statut: ppublish

Résumé

The National Institutes of Health's Environmental influences on Child Health Outcomes (ECHO) Program was designed to address solution-oriented research questions about the links between children's early life environment and their risks of pre-, peri-, and post-natal complications, asthma, obesity, neurodevelopmental disorders, and positive health. Children born very preterm are at increased risk for many of the outcomes on which ECHO focuses, but the contributions of environmental factors to this risk are not well characterized. Three ECHO cohorts consist almost exclusively of individuals born very preterm. Data provided to ECHO from cohorts can be used to address hypotheses about (1) differential risks of chronic health and developmental conditions between individuals born very preterm and those born at term; (2) health disparities across social determinants of health; and (3) mechanisms linking early-life exposures and later-life outcomes among individuals born very preterm. IMPACT: The National Institutes of Health's Environmental Influences on Child Health Outcomes Program is conducting solution-oriented research on the links between children's environment and health. Three ECHO cohorts comprise study participants born very preterm; these cohorts have enrolled, to date, 1751 individuals born in 14 states in the U.S. in between April 2002 and March 2020. Extensive data are available on early-life environmental exposures and child outcomes related to neurodevelopment, asthma, obesity, and positive health. Data from ECHO preterm cohorts can be used to address questions about the combined effects of preterm birth and environmental exposures on child health outcomes.

Identifiants

pubmed: 35948605
doi: 10.1038/s41390-022-02230-5
pii: 10.1038/s41390-022-02230-5
pmc: PMC9363858
doi:

Types de publication

Journal Article Review Research Support, N.I.H., Extramural Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

Langues

eng

Sous-ensembles de citation

IM

Pagination

1161-1176

Subventions

Organisme : NIEHS NIH HHS
ID : P30 ES010126
Pays : United States
Organisme : NIH HHS
ID : UG3 OD023320
Pays : United States
Organisme : NIH HHS
ID : UH3 OD023348
Pays : United States
Organisme : NIH HHS
ID : UH3 OD023347
Pays : United States
Organisme : NIH HHS
ID : UH3 OD023320
Pays : United States
Organisme : NICHD NIH HHS
ID : R03 HD101413
Pays : United States

Investigateurs

P B Smith (PB)
K L Newby (KL)
L P Jacobson (LP)
C B Parker (CB)

Informations de copyright

© 2022. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to the International Pediatric Research Foundation, Inc.

Références

Blaisdell, C. J. et al. The NIH ECHO Program: investigating how early environmental influences affect child health. Pediatr. Res. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41390-021-01574-8 (2021).
O’Shea, T. M. et al. The ELGAN study of the brain and related disorders in extremely low gestational age newborns. Early Hum. Dev. 85, 719–725 (2009).
pubmed: 19765918
Jackson, W. M. et al. Risk factors for chronic lung disease and asthma differ among children born extremely preterm. Pediatr. Pulmonol. 53, 1533–1540 (2018).
pmcid: 6716602 pubmed: 30160065
Scott, M. N. et al. Neurocognitive correlates of attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder symptoms in children born at extremely low gestational age. J. Dev. Behav. Pediatr. 38, 249–259 (2017).
pmcid: 5746049 pubmed: 28410255
Douglass, L. M. et al. Cumulative incidence of seizures and epilepsy in ten-year-old children born before 28 weeks’ gestation. Pediatr. Neurol. 73, 13–19 (2017).
pmcid: 5524375 pubmed: 28619377
Joseph, R. M. et al. Prevalence and associated features of autism spectrum disorder in extremely low gestational age newborns at age 10 years. Autism Res. 10, 224–232 (2017).
pubmed: 27220677
Joseph, R. M. et al. ELGAN Study Investigators. Neurocognitive and academic outcomes at age 10 years of extremely preterm newborns. Pediatrics 137, e20154343 (2016).
pmcid: 4811321 pubmed: 27006473
Risnes, K. et al. Mortality among young adults born preterm and early term in 4 Nordic nations. JAMA Netw. Open 4, e2032779 (2021).
pmcid: 7794670 pubmed: 33416885
Hofheimer, J. A. et al. Psychosocial and medical adversity associated with neonatal neurobehavior in infants born before 30 weeks gestation. Pediatr. Res. 87, 721–729 (2020).
pubmed: 31600769
Helderman, J. et al. Association of abnormal findings on neonatal cranial ultrasound with neurobehavior at neonatal intensive care unit discharge in infants born before 30 weeks’ gestation. JAMA Netw. Open 5, e226561 (2022).
pmcid: 8994127 pubmed: 35394511
McGowan, E. C. et al. Sociodemographic and medical influences on neurobehavioral patterns in preterm infants: a multi-center study. Early Hum. Dev. 142, 104954 (2020).
pmcid: 7115752 pubmed: 32007912
Everson, T. M. et al. Serious neonatal morbidities are associated with differences in DNA methylation among very preterm infants. Clin. Epigenet. 12, 151 (2020).
Everson, T. M. et al. Epigenome-wide analysis identifies genes and pathways linked to neurobehavioral variation in preterm infants. Sci. Rep. 9, 6322 (2019).
pmcid: 6474865 pubmed: 31004082
Aghagoli, G. et al. Epigenome-wide analysis identifies genes and pathways linked to acoustic cry variation in preterm infants. Pediatr. Res. 89, 1848–1854 (2021).
pubmed: 32967004
Pryhuber, G. S. et al. Prematurity and respiratory outcomes program (PROP): study protocol of a prospective multicenter study of respiratory outcomes of preterm infants in the United States. BMC Pediatr. 15, 37 (2015).
pmcid: 4407843 pubmed: 25886363
Ballard, R. A. et al. Randomized trial of late surfactant treatment in ventilated preterm infants receiving inhaled nitric oxide. J. Pediatr. 168, 23.e4–29.e4 (2016).
Juul, S. E., Mayock, D. E., Comstock, B. A. & Heagerty, P. J. Neuroprotective potential of erythropoietin in neonates; design of a randomized trial. Matern. Health Neonatol. Perinatol. 1, 27 (2015).
pmcid: 4823689 pubmed: 27057344
Stroustrup, A. et al. Cohort profile: the Neonatal Intensive Care Unit Hospital Exposures and Long-Term Health (NICU-HEALTH) cohort, a prospective preterm birth cohort in New York City. BMJ Open 9, e032758 (2019).
pmcid: 6887035 pubmed: 31772104
Islam, J. Y., Keller, R. L., Aschner, J. L., Hartert, T. V. & Moore, P. E. Understanding the short- and long-term respiratory outcomes of prematurity and bronchopulmonary dysplasia. Am. J. Respir. Crit. Care Med. 192, 134–156 (2015).
pmcid: 4532824 pubmed: 26038806
Poindexter, B. B. et al. Comparisons and limitations of current definitions of bronchopulmonary dysplasia for the Prematurity and Respiratory Outcomes Program. Ann. Am. Thorac. Soc. 12, 1822–1830 (2015).
pmcid: 4722827 pubmed: 26397992
Maitre, N. L. et al. Respiratory consequences of prematurity: evolution of a diagnosis and development of a comprehensive approach. J. Perinatol. 35, 313–321 (2015).
pmcid: 4414744 pubmed: 25811285
Keller, R. L. et al. Bronchopulmonary dysplasia and perinatal characteristics predict 1-year respiratory outcomes in newborns born at extremely low gestational age: a prospective cohort study. J. Pediatr. 187, 89–97 e83 (2017).
pmcid: 5533632 pubmed: 28528221
Ballard, P. L. et al. Inhaled nitric oxide increases urinary nitric oxide metabolites and cyclic guanosine monophosphate in premature infants: relationship to pulmonary outcome. Am. J. Perinatol. 32, 225–232 (2015).
pubmed: 24968129
Juul, S. E. et al. A randomized trial of erythropoietin for neuroprotection in preterm infants. N. Engl. J. Med. 382, 233–243 (2020).
pmcid: 7060076 pubmed: 31940698
Juul, S. E. & Ferriero, D. M. Pharmacologic neuroprotective strategies in neonatal brain injury. Clin. Perinatol. 41, 119–131 (2014).
pubmed: 24524450
Rangarajan, V. & Juul, S. E. Erythropoietin: emerging role of erythropoietin in neonatal neuroprotection. Pediatr. Neurol. 51, 481–488 (2014).
pmcid: 4180944 pubmed: 25266611
Pourkaviani, S. et al. Clinical validation of the Neonatal Infant Stressor Scale with preterm infant salivary cortisol. Pediatr. Res. 87, 1237–1243 (2020).
pubmed: 31847006
Stroustrup, A. et al. Neonatal intensive care unit phthalate exposure and preterm infant neurobehavioral performance. PLoS ONE 13, e0193835 (2018).
pmcid: 5837295 pubmed: 29505594
Stroustrup, A. et al. Sources of clinically significant neonatal intensive care unit phthalate exposure. J. Expo. Sci. Environ. Epidemiol. 30, 137–148 (2020).
pubmed: 30242269
Zhang, X. et al. The association of prenatal exposure to intensive traffic with early preterm infant neurobehavioral development as reflected by the NICU Network Neurobehavioral Scale (NNNS). Environ. Res. 183, 109204 (2020).
pmcid: 7325861 pubmed: 32311904
Korzeniewski, S. A., Allred, E. N., O’Shea, T. M., Leviton, A. & Kuban, K. C. K. Elevated protein concentrations in newborn blood and the risks of autism spectrum disorder, and of social impairment, at age 10 years among infants born before the 28th week of gestation. Transl. Psychiatry 8, 115 (2018).
pmcid: 5993745 pubmed: 29884819
Kuban, K. C. et al. The breadth and type of systemic inflammation and the risk of adverse neurological outcomes in extremely low gestation newborns. Pediatr. Neurol. 52, 42–48 (2015).
pubmed: 25459361
Kuban, K. C. et al. Systemic inflammation and cerebral palsy risk in extremely preterm infants. J. Child Neurol. 29, 1692–1698 (2014).
pmcid: 4167987 pubmed: 24646503
Kuban, K. C. et al. Association of circulating proinflammatory and anti-inflammatory protein biomarkers in extremely preterm born children with subsequent brain magnetic resonance imaging volumes and cognitive function at age 10 years. J. Pediatr. 210, 81–90 e83 (2019).
pmcid: 7137312 pubmed: 31076229
Kuban, K. C. et al. Circulating inflammatory-associated proteins in the first month of life and cognitive impairment at age 10 years in children born extremely preterm. J. Pediatr. 180, 116.e1–123.e1 (2017).
Kuban, K. J. et al. Among children born extremely preterm a higher level of circulating neurotrophins is associated with lower risk of cognitive impairment at school age. J. Pediatr. 201, 40.e4–48.e4 (2018).
Leviton, A. et al. Circulating biomarkers in extremely preterm infants associated with ultrasound indicators of brain damage. Eur. J. Paediatr. Neurol. 22, 440–450 (2018).
pmcid: 5899659 pubmed: 29429901
Leviton, A. et al. Neonatal systemic inflammation and the risk of low scores on measures of reading and mathematics achievement at age 10 years among children born extremely preterm. Int. J. Dev. Neurosci. 66, 45–53 (2018).
pmcid: 5879009 pubmed: 29413878
Leviton, A. et al. Two-hit model of brain damage in the very preterm newborn: small for gestational age and postnatal systemic inflammation. Pediatr. Res. 73, 362–370 (2013).
pubmed: 23364171
Leviton, A. et al. Early postnatal blood concentrations of inflammation-related proteins and microcephaly two years later in infants born before the 28th post-menstrual week. Early Hum. Dev. 87, 325–330 (2011).
pubmed: 21334149
Leviton, A. et al. The relationship between early concentrations of 25 blood proteins and cerebral white matter injury in preterm newborns. J. Pediatr. 158, 897–903 (2011).
pubmed: 21238986
Leviton, A. J. et al. The risk of neurodevelopmental disorders at age 10 years associated with blood concentrations of interleukins 4 and 10 during the first postnatal month of children born extremely preterm. Cytokine 110, 181–188 (2018).
pmcid: 6668706 pubmed: 29763840
O’Shea, T. M. et al. Elevated concentrations of inflammation-related proteins in postnatal blood predict severe developmental delay at 2 years of age in extremely preterm infants. J. Pediatr. 160, 395–401 (2012).
pubmed: 22000304
O’Shea, T. M. et al. Elevated blood levels of inflammation-related proteins are associated with an attention problem at age 24 mo in extremely preterm infants. Pediatr. Res. 75, 781–787 (2014).
pmcid: 4429865 pubmed: 24614800
O’Shea, T. M. et al. Inflammation-initiating illnesses, inflammation-related proteins, and cognitive impairment in extremely preterm infants. Brain Behav. Immun. 29, 104–112 (2013).
pmcid: 3582030 pubmed: 23295265
Hecht, J. L. et al. Relationship between neonatal blood protein concentrations and placenta histologic characteristics in extremely low GA newborns. Pediatr. Res. 69, 68–73 (2011).
pmcid: 3066075 pubmed: 20921924
Hecht, J. L. et al. Histological characteristics of singleton placentas delivered before the 28th week of gestation. Pathology 40, 372–376 (2008).
pubmed: 18446627
Hecht, J. L. et al. Characterization of chorioamnionitis in 2nd-trimester C-section placentas and correlation with microorganism recovery from subamniotic tissues. Pediatr. Dev. Pathol. 11, 15–22 (2008).
pubmed: 18237241
Tilley, S. K. et al. Genomic biomarkers of prenatal intrauterine inflammation in umbilical cord tissue predict later life neurological outcomes. PLoS ONE 12, e0176953 (2017).
pmcid: 5426658 pubmed: 28493900
Tilley, S. K. et al. Placental CpG methylation of infants born extremely preterm predicts cognitive impairment later in life. PLoS ONE 13, e0193271 (2018).
pmcid: 5841757 pubmed: 29513726
Martin, E. et al. Sexual epigenetic dimorphism in the human placenta: implications for susceptibility during the prenatal period. Epigenomics 9, 267–278 (2017).
pmcid: 5331919 pubmed: 28234023
Meakin, C. J. et al. Placental CpG methylation of HPA-axis genes is associated with cognitive impairment at age 10 among children born extremely preterm. Horm. Behav. 101, 29–35 (2018).
pmcid: 6354776 pubmed: 29477804
Santos, H. P. Jr. et al. Evidence for the placenta-brain axis: multi-omic kernel aggregation predicts intellectual and social impairment in children born extremely preterm. Mol. Autism 11, 97 (2020).
pubmed: 33308293
Santos, H. P. Jr. et al. Epigenome-wide DNA methylation in placentas from preterm infants: association with maternal socioeconomic status. Epigenetics 14, 751–765 (2019).
pmcid: 6615526 pubmed: 31062658
Tomlinson, M. S. et al. Microorganisms in the human placenta are associated with altered CpG methylation of immune and inflammation-related genes. PLoS ONE 12, e0188664 (2017).
pmcid: 5730116 pubmed: 29240761
Tomlinson, M. S. et al. Microorganisms in the placenta: links to early-life inflammation and neurodevelopment in children. Clin. Microbiol. Rev. 32, e00103–e00118 (2019).
pmcid: 6589865 pubmed: 31043389
Bulka, C. M. et al. Placental CpG methylation of inflammation, angiogenic, and neurotrophic genes and retinopathy of prematurity. Invest. Ophthalmol. Vis. Sci. 60, 2888–2894 (2019).
pmcid: 6607927 pubmed: 31266060
Wood, C. T. et al. Antecedents of obesity among children born extremely preterm. Pediatrics 142, e20180519 (2018).
pubmed: 30291168
Linthavong, O. et al. Neurocognitive and health correlates of overweight and obesity among ten-year-old children born extremely preterm. J. Pediatr. 200, 84.e4–90.e4 (2018).
Bangma, J. T. et al. Assessing positive child health among individuals born extremely preterm. J. Pediatr. 202, 44.e4–49.e4 (2018).
Nobile, S., Di Sipio Morgia, C. & Vento, G. Perinatal origins of adult disease and opportunities for health promotion: a narrative review. J. Personal. Med. 12, 157 (2022).
Kobayashi, Y. Developmental origins of metaflammation; a bridge to the future between the DOHaD theory and evolutionary biology. Front. Endocrinol. 13, 839436 (2022).
Tomlinson, M. S. et al. Neurocognitive and social-communicative function of children born very preterm at 10 years of age: associations with microorganisms recovered from the placenta parenchyma. J. Perinatol. 40, 306–315 (2020).
pubmed: 31624322
Leviton, A., Allred, E. N., Yamamoto, H. & Fichorova, R. N. Relationships among the concentrations of 25 inflammation-associated proteins during the first postnatal weeks in the blood of infants born before the 28th week of gestation. Cytokine 57, 182–190 (2012).
pubmed: 22133344
Leviton, A. et al. Inflammation-related proteins in the blood of extremely low gestational age newborns. The contribution of inflammation to the appearance of developmental regulation. Cytokine 53, 66–73 (2011).
pubmed: 20934883
Stroustrup, A., Teitelbaum, S. L. & Aschner, J. L. The value of preterm infant environmental health cohorts: the canary in the coal mine. JAMA Pediatr. 171, 1139–1140 (2017).
pmcid: 6143135 pubmed: 29059271
Martinez, A., de la Rosa, R., Mujahid, M. & Thakur, N. Structural racism and its pathways to asthma and atopic dermatitis. J. Allergy Clin. Immunol. 148, 1112–1120 (2021).
pmcid: 9186508 pubmed: 34743832
Newsome, F. A., Gravlee, C. C. & Cardel, M. I. Systemic and environmental contributors to obesity inequities in marginalized racial and ethnic groups. Nurs. Clin. North Am. 56, 619–634 (2021).
pubmed: 34749900
Culhane, J. F. & Goldenberg, R. L. Racial disparities in preterm birth. Semin. Perinatol. 35, 234–239 (2011).
pubmed: 21798403
Burris, H. H. & Hacker, M. R. Birth outcome racial disparities: a result of intersecting social and environmental factors. Semin. Perinatol. 41, 360–366 (2017).
pmcid: 5657505 pubmed: 28818300
Burris, H. H. et al. The promise and pitfalls of precision medicine to resolve black-white racial disparities in preterm birth. Pediatr. Res. 87, 221–226 (2020).
pubmed: 31382269
Li, X. et al. Association between ambient fine particulate matter and preterm birth or term low birth weight: An updated systematic review and meta-analysis. Environ. Pollut. 227, 596–605 (2017).
pubmed: 28457735
Stieb, D. M., Chen, L., Eshoul, M. & Judek, S. Ambient air pollution, birth weight and preterm birth: a systematic review and meta-analysis. Environ. Res. 117, 100–111 (2012).
pubmed: 22726801
Jelliffe-Pawlowski, L. L., Miles, S. Q., Courtney, J. G., Materna, B. & Charlton, V. Effect of magnitude and timing of maternal pregnancy blood lead (Pb) levels on birth outcomes. J. Perinatol. 26, 154–162 (2006).
pubmed: 16453008
Collins, J. W. Jr, David, R. J., Handler, A., Wall, S. & Andes, S. Very low birthweight in African American infants: the role of maternal exposure to interpersonal racial discrimination. Am. J. Public Health 94, 2132–2138 (2004).
pmcid: 1448603 pubmed: 15569965
Messer, L. C., Kaufman, J. S., Dole, N., Herring, A. & Laraia, B. A. Violent crime exposure classification and adverse birth outcomes: a geographically-defined cohort study. Int. J. Health Geogr. 5, 22 (2006).
pmcid: 1502132 pubmed: 16707017
Mustillo, S. et al. Self-reported experiences of racial discrimination and Black-White differences in preterm and low-birthweight deliveries: the CARDIA Study. Am. J. Public Health 94, 2125–2131 (2004).
pmcid: 1448602 pubmed: 15569964
Burris, H. H. et al. Racial disparities in preterm birth in USA: a biosensor of physical and social environmental exposures. Arch. Dis. Child. 104, 931–935 (2019).
pubmed: 30850379
Vohr, B. R., Poggi Davis, E., Wanke, C. A. & Krebs, N. F. Neurodevelopment: the impact of nutrition and inflammation during preconception and pregnancy in low-resource settings. Pediatrics 139, S38–S49 (2017).
pubmed: 28562247
Couto, P. F., Goto, J. B. & Bastos, J. L. Blood pressure and interpersonal discrimination: systematic review of epidemiologic studies. Arq. Bras. Cardiol. 99, 956–963 (2012).
pubmed: 23033111
Beck, A. F. et al. The color of health: how racism, segregation, and inequality affect the health and well-being of preterm infants and their families. Pediatr. Res. 87, 227–234 (2020).
pubmed: 31357209
Sigurdson, K., Morton, C., Mitchell, B. & Profit, J. Disparities in NICU quality of care: a qualitative study of family and clinician accounts. J. Perinatol. 38, 600–607 (2018).
pmcid: 5998372 pubmed: 29622778
Sigurdson, K. et al. Racial/ethnic disparities in neonatal intensive care: a systematic review. Pediatrics 144, e20183114 (2019).
pubmed: 31358664
Horbar, J. D. et al. Racial segregation and inequality in the neonatal intensive care unit for very low-birth-weight and very preterm infants. JAMA Pediatr. 173, 455–461 (2019).
pmcid: 6503514 pubmed: 30907924
Profit, J. et al. Racial/ethnic disparity in NICU quality of care delivery. Pediatrics 140, e20170918 (2017).
pubmed: 28847984
Howell, E. A. et al. Double disadvantage in delivery hospital for Black and Hispanic women and high-risk infants. Matern. Child Health J. 24, 687–693 (2020).
pmcid: 7265984 pubmed: 32303940
Padula, A. M. et al. Multilevel social factors and NICU quality of care in California. J. Perinatol. 41, 404–412 (2021).
pubmed: 32157221
Lake, E. T. et al. Disparities in perinatal quality outcomes for very low birth weight infants in neonatal intensive care. Health Serv. Res. 50, 374–397 (2015).
pubmed: 25250882
Janevic, T. et al. Association of race/ethnicity with very preterm neonatal morbidities. JAMA Pediatr. 172, 1061–1069 (2018).
pmcid: 6248139 pubmed: 30208467
Howell, E. A. et al. Differences in morbidity and mortality rates in Black, White, and Hispanic very preterm infants among New York City hospitals. JAMA Pediatr. 172, 269–277 (2018).
pmcid: 5796743 pubmed: 29297054
Janevic, T. et al. Racial and economic neighborhood segregation, site of delivery, and morbidity and mortality in neonates born very preterm. J. Pediatr. 235, 116–123 (2021).
pmcid: 9582630 pubmed: 33794221
Mage, D. T., Maria Donner, E. & Holmes, L. Risk differences in disease-specific infant mortality between Black and White US children, 1968–2015: an epidemiologic investigation. J. Racial Ethn. Health Dispar. 6, 86–93 (2019).
Liu, J., Sakarovitch, C., Sigurdson, K., Lee, H. C. & Profit, J. Disparities in health care-associated infections in the NICU. Am. J. Perinatol. 37, 166–173 (2020).
pubmed: 31039596
Lakshmanan, A. et al. Viewpoints from families for improving transition from NICU-to-home for infants with medical complexity at a safety net hospital: a qualitative study. BMC Pediatr. 19, 223 (2019).
pmcid: 6610911 pubmed: 31277630
Harmon, S. L., Conaway, M., Sinkin, R. A. & Blackman, J. A. Factors associated with neonatal intensive care follow-up appointment compliance. Clin. Pediatr. 52, 389–396 (2013).
Saatci, D. et al. Association between race and COVID-19 outcomes among 2.6 million children in England. JAMA Pediatr. 175, 928–938 (2021).
pubmed: 34152371
Dennis-Heyward, E. A. Disparities in susceptibility to multisystem inflammatory syndrome in children. JAMA Pediatr. 175, 892–893 (2021).
pubmed: 34228053
Dennis-Heyward, E. A. & Shah, S. N. Pediatric COVID-19 disparities and prioritizing equity-children are not spared. JAMA Pediatr. 175, 898–900 (2021).
pubmed: 34152377
Dooley, D. G., Bandealy, A. & Tschudy, M. M. Low-income children and coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) in the US. JAMA Pediatr. 174, 922–923 (2020).
pubmed: 32401283
Forrest, C. B., Blackwell, C. K. & Camargo, C. A. Jr Advancing the science of children’s positive health in the National Institutes of Health Environmental Influences on Child Health Outcomes (ECHO) research program. J. Pediatr. 196, 298–300 (2018).
pmcid: 5996976 pubmed: 29567045
Mesman, E., Vreeker, A. & Hillegers, M. Resilience and mental health in children and adolescents: an update of the recent literature and future directions. Curr. Opin. Psychiatry 34, 586–592 (2021).
pmcid: 8500371 pubmed: 34433193
Askeland, K. G. et al. Life events and adolescent depressive symptoms: protective factors associated with resilience. PLoS ONE 15, e0234109 (2020).
pmcid: 7274383 pubmed: 32502163
Taylor, H. G., Minich, N., Schluchter, M., Espy, K. A. & Klein, N. Resilience in extremely preterm/extremely low birth weight kindergarten children. J. Int. Neuropsychol. Soc. 25, 362–374 (2019).
pmcid: 6501807 pubmed: 31050331
Bangma, J. T. et al. Early life antecedents of positive child health among 10-year-old children born extremely preterm. Pediatr. Res. 86, 758–765 (2019).
pmcid: 6802282 pubmed: 31005057
Bradley, R. H. Children’s home environments, health, behavior, and intervention efforts: a review using the HOME inventory as a marker measure. Genet. Soc. Gen. Psychol. Monogr. 119, 437–490 (1993).
pubmed: 8150270
Leviton, A. et al. Socioeconomic status and early blood concentrations of inflammation-related and neurotrophic proteins among extremely preterm newborns. PLoS ONE 14, e0214154 (2019).
pmcid: 6435168 pubmed: 30913246
Fichorova, R. N. et al. Maternal microbe-specific modulation of inflammatory response in extremely low-gestational-age newborns. Mbio 2, e00280-00210 (2011).
van der Burg, J. W. et al. Is maternal obesity associated with sustained inflammation in extremely low gestational age newborns? Early Hum. Dev. 89, 949–955 (2013).
pubmed: 24090868
Allred, E. N. et al. Systemic inflammation during the first postnatal month and the risk of attention deficit hyperactivity disorder characteristics among 10 year-old children born extremely preterm. J. Neuroimmune Pharmacol. 12, 531–543 (2017).
pmcid: 6508968 pubmed: 28405874
Aris, I. M., Kleinman, K. P., Belfort, M. B., Kaimal, A. & Oken, E. A 2017 US reference for singleton birth weight percentiles using obstetric estimates of gestation. Pediatrics 144, e20190076 (2019).
pubmed: 31201230

Auteurs

T Michael O'Shea (TM)

Department of Pediatrics, University of North Carolina School of Medicine, Chapel Hill, NC, USA. moshea52@email.unc.edu.

Monica McGrath (M)

Department of Epidemiology, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Baltimore, MD, USA.

Judy L Aschner (JL)

Department of Pediatrics, Joseph M. Sanzari Children's Hospital at Hackensack University Medical Center, Hackensack, NJ, USA.
Department of Pediatrics, Hackensack Meridian School of Medicine, Nutley, NJ, USA.
Department of Pediatrics, Albert Einstein College of Medicine, Bronx, NY, USA.

Barry Lester (B)

Department of Pediatrics, Women & Infants Hospital, Brown University, Providence, RI, USA.
Brown Center for the Study of Children at Risk, Warren Alpert Medical School of Brown University, Women & Infants Hospital, Providence, RI, USA.
Department of Psychiatry and Human Behavior, Warren Alpert Medical School of Brown University, Providence, RI, USA.

Hudson P Santos (HP)

Biobehavioral Laboratory, School of Nursing, The University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, NC, USA.
Institute for Environmental Health Solutions, Gillings School of Global Public Health, The University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, NC, USA.

Carmen Marsit (C)

Gangarosa Department of Environmental Health, Rollins School of Public Health, Emory University, Atlanta, GA, USA.

Annemarie Stroustrup (A)

Departments of Pediatrics and Occupational Medicine, Epidemiology and Prevention, Zucker School of Medicine at Hofstra, Northwell Health, Cohen Children's Medical Center, New Hyde Park, NY, USA.

Crisma Emmanuel (C)

Biobehavioral Laboratory, School of Nursing, The University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, NC, USA.

Mark Hudak (M)

Department of Pediatrics, University of Florida College of Medicine - Jacksonville, Jacksonville, FL, USA.

Elisabeth McGowan (E)

Women & Infants Hospital, Warren Alpert Medical School of Brown University, Providence, RI, USA.

Simran Patel (S)

Department of Pediatrics, University of North Carolina School of Medicine, Chapel Hill, NC, USA.

Rebecca C Fry (RC)

Institute for Environmental Health Solutions, Gillings School of Global Public Health, The University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, NC, USA.
Department of Environmental Sciences and Engineering, Gillings School of Global Public Health, The University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, NC, USA.

Articles similaires

[Redispensing of expensive oral anticancer medicines: a practical application].

Lisanne N van Merendonk, Kübra Akgöl, Bastiaan Nuijen
1.00
Humans Antineoplastic Agents Administration, Oral Drug Costs Counterfeit Drugs

Smoking Cessation and Incident Cardiovascular Disease.

Jun Hwan Cho, Seung Yong Shin, Hoseob Kim et al.
1.00
Humans Male Smoking Cessation Cardiovascular Diseases Female
Humans United States Aged Cross-Sectional Studies Medicare Part C
1.00
Humans Yoga Low Back Pain Female Male

Classifications MeSH