| Literature DB >> 29163938 |
Abdullah H Baqui1, Rasheda Khanam1, Mohammad Sayedur Rahman1, Aziz Ahmed1, Hasna Hena Rahman1, Mamun Ibne Moin1, Salahuddin Ahmed1, Fyezah Jehan2, Imran Nisar2, Atiya Hussain2, Muhammad Ilyas2, Aneeta Hotwani2, Muhammad Sajid2, Shahida Qureshi2, Anita Zaidi2, Sunil Sazawal3, Said M Ali3, Saikat Deb3, Mohammed Hamad Juma3, Usha Dhingra3, Arup Dutta3, Shaali Makame Ame3, Caroline Hayward4, Igor Rudan4, Mike Zangenberg5, Donna Russell5, Sachiyo Yoshida5, Ozren Polašek6,7, Alexander Manu5, Rajiv Bahl5.
Abstract
OBJECTIVES: The AMANHI study aims to seek for biomarkers as predictors of important pregnancy-related outcomes, and establish a biobank in developing countries for future research as new methods and technologies become available.Entities:
Mesh:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 29163938 PMCID: PMC5665675 DOI: 10.7189/jogh.07.021202
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Glob Health ISSN: 2047-2978 Impact factor: 4.413
Figure 1Overview of the study protocol for surveillance and bio–specimen collection within the AMANHI bio–repository study.
Type of epidemiological and phenotypic data being collected during home visits
| Modality | Details being collected in AMANHI biorepository study | Time of collection |
|---|---|---|
| Background characteristics | Demographic, socio–economic, other characteristics of the woman and her household and an asset inventory to be used in constructing an asset index for classifying women into wealth quintiles | Baseline visit |
| Medical history | Previous obstetric and gynaecological history, history of birth defects and congenital anomalies among previous babies, stillbirths and IUGRs; previous medical and surgical history including medicinal prescription drugs taken or being taken for chronic diseases and periodontal diseases | Baseline and antenatal (AN) visits |
| Risk factors and exposures | Cigarette smoking, alcohol ingestion, smoke from biomass cooking fuels, occupational chemical exposures, strenuous physical work and the use of narcotics and other drugs | Baseline visit |
| Depression screening | Depression screening using the 9–question patient health questionnaire (PHQ–9) | AN and postnatal (PN) visits |
| Anthropometry | Maternal weight and height, maternal mid–upper arm circumference and abdominal girth | Baseline, AN and PN visits |
| Reported morbidity | Questions about any illness or complications during pregnancy, childbirth and the postpartum period. Care–seeking, hospitalizations and treatment received for any morbidity | AN and PN visits |
| Assessment for pre–eclampsia | Measurement of blood pressure using a digital (Microlife®) sphygmomanometer (calibrated for hyperdynamic circulation in pregnancy) and testing urine for proteins (Uristix®) | All visits except delivery visits |
| Nutritional assessment | Food frequency questionnaire | One AN visit and Post day 42 PN visit |
Timing of collection, processing and/or main extraction for AMANHI biological samples
| Sample type | Timing of collection | Processing & planned use of the sample |
|---|---|---|
| Maternal blood | Enrolment, 24–28 weeks or 32–36 weeks, postnatal day 42–60 | For DNA extraction, HbA1C analysis, and serum/plasma extraction, aliquoting and storage |
| Maternal urine | Enrolment, 24–28 weeks or 32–36 weeks, postnatal day 42–60 | Uncentrifuged and centrifuged sample, biochemical and pathological analysis |
| Cord blood sample | At birth | DNA extraction, HbA1C analysis, and serum/plasma extraction, aliquoting and storage |
| Cord tissue samples | At birth | RNALater, alcohol, flash frozen and formalin sample |
| Placenta tissue samples | At birth | RNALater, alcohol, flash frozen and formalin sample |
| Placenta membrane samples | At birth | RNALater, alcohol, flash frozen and formalin sample |
| Maternal faeces | At birth | Maternal faecal microbiome |
| Paternal saliva | Antenatal or postnatal | Paternal DNA |
| Fetal faeces | Postnatal day 42–60 | Newborn faecal microbiome |