The mother-infant study cohort (misc): Methodology, challenges, and baseline characteristics
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Public Library of Science
Abstract
Background The United Arab Emirates (UAE) exhibits alarming high prevalence of Non-Communicable Diseases (NCDs) and their risk factors. Emerging evidence highlighted the role of maternal and early child nutrition in preventing later-onset NCDs. The objectives of this article are to describe the design and methodology of the first Mother and Infant Study Cohort (MISC) in UAE; present the baseline demographic characteristics of the study participants; and discuss the challenges of the cohort and their respective responding strategies. Methods The MISC is an ongoing two-year prospective cohort study which recruited Arab pregnant women in their third trimester from prenatal clinics in Dubai, Sharjah and Ajman. Participants will be interviewed six times (once during pregnancy, at delivery, and at 2, 6, 12 and 24months postpartum). Perinatal information is obtained from hospital records. Collected data include socio-demographic characteristics, lifestyle, dietary intake and anthropome-try; infant feeding practices, cognitive development; along with maternal and infant blood profile and breast milk profile. Results The preliminary results reported that 256 completed baseline assessment (mean age: 30.5 ±6.0 years; 76.6% multiparous; about 60% were either overweight or obese before pregnancy). The prevalence of gestational diabetes was 19.2%. Upon delivery, 208 women-infant pairs were retained (mean gestational age: 38.5±1.5 weeks; 33.3% caesarean section delivery; 5.3% low birthweight; 5.7% macrosomic deliveries). Besides participant retention, the main encountered challenges pertained to cultural complexity, underestimation the necessary start-up time, staff, and costs, and biochemical data collection. Conclusions Despite numerous methodological, logistical and sociocultural challenges, satisfactory followup rates are recorded. Strategies addressing challenges are documented, providing information for planning and implementing future birth cohort studies locally and internationally. © 2018 Radwan et al. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
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Adult, Anthropometry, Cohort studies, Diet, Epidemiologic studies, Female, Humans, Infant, Life style, Mothers, Noncommunicable diseases, Pregnancy, Socioeconomic factors, Surveys and questionnaires, Young adult, Ajman, Arab, Article, Biochemical analysis, Breast milk, Cesarean section, Clinical study, Cognitive development, Cohort analysis, Controlled study, Cultural factor, Demography, Dietary intake, Dubai, Gestational age, Hospital, Hospital cost, Human, Infant feeding, Information processing, Interview, Lifestyle, Low birth weight, Major clinical study, Maternal blood, Medical record, Medical staff, Methodology, Mother infant study cohort, Multipara, Obesity, Obstetric delivery, Perinatal period, Pregnancy diabetes mellitus, Pregnant woman, Prevalence, Prospective study, Puerperium, Sharjah, Study design, Third trimester pregnancy, Epidemiology, Mother, Non communicable disease, Questionnaire, Socioeconomics, Statistics and numerical data