| Literature DB >> 31311588 |
Christine M Seroogy1,2, Jeffrey J VanWormer3, Brent F Olson3, Michael D Evans4, Tara Johnson3, Deanna Cole3, Kathrine L Barnes3, Tamara Kronenwetter Koepel3, Amy Dresen4, Jennifer Meece3, Ronald E Gangnon4, Matthew C Keifer5,6, Casper G Bendixsen3, James E Gern4.
Abstract
Epidemiologic and cross-sectional studies suggest that early life farming and animal exposures are associated with major health benefits, influencing immune development and modifying the subsequent risk of allergic diseases, including asthma. The Wisconsin Infant Study Cohort (WISC) study was established in central Wisconsin to test the hypothesis that early life animal farm exposures are associated with distinct innate immune cell maturation trajectories, decreased allergen sensitization and reduced respiratory viral illness burden during the first 2 years of life. Beginning in 2013, a total of 240 families have been enrolled, 16,522 biospecimens have been collected, and 4098 questionnaires have been administered and entered into a secure database. Study endpoints include nasal respiratory virus identification and respiratory illness burden score, allergic sensitization, expression of allergic disease, and anti-viral immune response maturation and profiles. The WISC study prospective design, broad biospecimen collections, and unique US rural community will provide insights into the role of environmental exposures on early life immune maturation profiles associated with protection from allergic sensitization and significant respiratory viral disease burden. The WISC study findings will ultimately inform development of new strategies to promote resistance to severe respiratory viral illnesses and design primary prevention approaches for allergic diseases for all infants.Entities:
Keywords: Allergies; Birth cohort; Farm; Pregnancy; Respiratory virus
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31311588 PMCID: PMC6636141 DOI: 10.1186/s13104-019-4448-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Res Notes ISSN: 1756-0500
WISC study activity schedule
| Activity | Screen | Prenatal | Birth | 2 months | 6 months | 9 months | 12 months | 15, 18, 21 months | 24 months | Illness (as needed) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Eligibility | X | |||||||||
| Consent | X | |||||||||
| Medical record extraction | X | X | X | X | ||||||
| Respiratory illness symptom diary | X | |||||||||
| Questionnaires | ||||||||||
| Prenatal | X | |||||||||
| Postnatal | X | X | X | |||||||
| Infant feeding and diet | X | X | X | X | X | |||||
| Child diet | X | X | ||||||||
| Respiratory allergy | X | X | X | X | X | X | ||||
| Occupational exposures | X | |||||||||
| Personal samples | ||||||||||
| Vaginal swab | X | |||||||||
| Blood collection | Xa | X | X | |||||||
| Nasal swab | X | X | X | Xb | X | |||||
| Stool | X | X | X | |||||||
| Skin | X | X | X | |||||||
| Saliva | X | X | X | |||||||
| Urine | X | X | X | |||||||
| Breast milk | X | |||||||||
| Nasal swab (viral) | X | |||||||||
| Nasal brushing | X | |||||||||
| Environmental samples | ||||||||||
| Dust (settled (incl barn dust, if applicable) | X | X | X | |||||||
| Dust (vacuum) | X | |||||||||
| Drinking water | X | X | X | |||||||
| Farm milk | X | X | ||||||||
aCord; b18 months only
Fig. 1Schematic of biospecimen and data collection for WISC study primary outcome. Middle turbinate nasal swabs are collected using FLOQSwabs™
WISC study questionnaires
| Instrument name | Purpose | References |
|---|---|---|
| Prenatal | Family health history Environmental exposures Lifestyle | Gabriela [ |
| Postnatal | Environmental exposures Lifestyle | Gabriela [ |
| Infant feeding and diet | Maternal dietary history Infant dietary history | 2000 NCI Multifactor Screener ( |
| Child diet | Child dietary history | n/a |
| Respiratory and allergy | Allergies Respiratory illnesses Health care utilization | ISAAC [ |
| Occupational exposures | Farm exposure Occupational-related respiratory hazards | Adapted from [ |
| Medication use | Mother until cease breastfeeding Infant/child | n/a |
n/a not applicable
Biospecimen type and testing plan
| Sample type | Testing plan |
|---|---|
| Maternal vaginal swab | Vaginal microbiome |
| Maternal breast milk | sIgA, milk microbiome, metabolomics |
| Infant/child blood | Innate immune cell function, Treg cell profile, plasma lipidomics, allergen-specific and total IgE, cryopreservation |
| Infant/child nasal swab | Nasal microbiome, respiratory virus detection (surveillance) |
| Infant/child nasal illness swab | Respiratory virus detection (illness) |
| Child nasal brushinga | Transcriptomics |
| Infant/child stool | Gastrointestinal microbiome |
| Infant/child urine | Metabolomics |
| Infant/child skin swab | Skin microbiome |
| Infant/child saliva | Oral microbiome |
| Household airborne and vacuum dust | Environmental microbiome (bacterial and fungal) |
| Drinking water | Environmental microbiome |
| Barn airborne dust | Environmental microbiome (bacterial and fungal) |
| Farm milk | Microbiome, metabolomics |
sIgA secreted immunoglobulin A, Treg T regulatory cell
aObtained in subset of participants
Fig. 2WISC study recruitment and enrollment
Baseline sociodemographic characteristics of mothers and children enrolled in the wisc study, stratified by farm status
| Characteristic | Farm (n = 111) (%) | Non-farm (n = 129) (%) | p-value |
|---|---|---|---|
| Mother | |||
| Maternal age (years) | NS | ||
| ≥ 40 | 2 | 2 | |
| 35–39 | 20 | 9 | |
| 30–34 | 40 | 44 | |
| 25–29 | 32 | 40 | |
| 18–24 | 7 | 5 | |
| Marital status | NS | ||
| Married or living with a partner | 89 | 88 | |
| Single | 5 | 8 | |
| Unknown | 6 | 4 | |
| Education | NS | ||
| High school or less | 6 | 6 | |
| Associate degree or some college | 29 | 28 | |
| Bachelor’s degree | 50 | 45 | |
| Graduate degree | 11 | 18 | |
| Unknown | 4 | 3 | |
| Annual household income | NS | ||
| ≥ $100,000 | 18 | 22 | |
| $25,000–$99,999 | 63 | 68 | |
| < $25,000 | 9 | 4 | |
| Unknown | 10 | 6 | |
| Health insurance | NS | ||
| Private | 37 | 46 | |
| Public-assisted | 60 | 53 | |
| Unknown | 3 | 1 | |
| Children | |||
| Enrollment year | NS | ||
| 2013 | 5 | 3 | |
| 2014 | 16 | 13 | |
| 2015 | 37 | 41 | |
| 2016 | 23 | 29 | |
| 2017 | 13 | 6 | |
| 2018 | 6 | 8 | |
| Season of birth | NS | ||
| Winter (Dec–Feb) | 23 | 22 | |
| Spring (Mar–May) | 28 | 25 | |
| Summer (Jun–Aug) | 22 | 27 | |
| Fall (Sep–Nov) | 27 | 26 | |
| Sex |
| ||
| Female | 43 | 58 | |
| Male | 57 | 42 | |
| Race/ethnicity | NS | ||
| White | 99 | 94 | |
| Black or African American | 1 | 2 | |
| Asian | 0 | 2 | |
| Other | 0 | 2 | |
| County of residence |
| ||
| Wood | 14 | 68 | |
| Clark | 23 | 17 | |
| Marathon | 23 | 19 | |
| Chippewa | 9 | 0 | |
| Barron | 8 | 0 | |
| Other (13 counties)a | 23 | 5 | |
Values are reported as frequency (% of group total)
A p value ≤ 0.05 (in italics) was considered significant
NS not significant
aStudy residence ≤ 5% in either group were combined under other
Home environment and personal health characteristics of WISC study participants
| Characteristic | Farm (n = 111) (%) | Non-farm (n = 129) (%) | p-value |
|---|---|---|---|
| Number of children in household | NS | ||
| ≥ 4 | 19 | 12 | |
| 3 | 23 | 15 | |
| 2 | 26 | 42 | |
| 1 | 25 | 23 | |
| Unknown | 7 | 8 | |
| Employment (mother) |
| ||
| Employed outside home/farm | 60 | 78 | |
| Not employed outside home/farm | 36 | 19 | |
| Unknown | 4 | 3 | |
| Mode of delivery | |||
| Vaginal | 83 | 79 | NS |
| C-section | 17 | 21 | NS |
| Child exclusively breastmilk fed (2 months) | 50 | 47 | NS |
| Child spends time at least 1 day per week (2 month infant) | |||
| Daycare facility | 14 | 21 | NS |
| Another home | 46 | 31 |
|
| Maternal smoking | |||
| During year prior to pregnancy | 2 | 4 | NS |
| During pregnancy | 9 | 15 | NS |
| Maternal regulara farm milk consumption during pregnancy | 16 | 2 | |
| Dog ownership (prenatal)b | 73 | 52 |
|
| Dog spends time indoors | 31 | 35 | NS |
| Cat ownership (prenatal)b | 76 | 32 | |
| Cat spends time indoors | 19 | 15 | NS |
| Maternal history of allergic rhinitis (ever) | 11 | 18 | NS |
| Maternal history of asthma (ever) | 16 | 21 | NS |
| Maternal history of atopic dermatitis (ever) | 18 | 20 | NS |
Values are reported as frequency (% of group total)
A p value ≤ 0.05 (in italics) was considered significant
NS not significant
aRegular is defined as weekly or greater frequency
b5% missing data or refused
Farm characteristics of WISC mothers/infants in the farm group
| Characteristic/activity (n = 111 unless otherwise stated) | |
|---|---|
| Farm residence and work status | |
| Live/work on farm | 80% |
| Work only on farm | 16% |
| Unknown | 4% |
| Animals kept on farm | |
| Cows | 77% |
| Cattle (bulls, steers) | 32% |
| Goats | 13% |
| Pigs | 19% |
| Poultry | 32% |
| Horses | 13% |
| Sheep | 6% |
| Other | 11% |
| Number of farm animal species | |
| 1 | 43% |
| 2 | 25% |
| 3 | 14% |
| 4 | 8% |
| 5 | 2% |
| 6 | 1% |
| Unknown | 7% |
| Crops grown and harvested | 88% |
| Mother: regulara direct contact during pregnancy with | |
| Cattle (cows, calves, bulls, steers) | 66% |
| Goats | 7% |
| Pigs | 10% |
| Poultry | 25% |
| Hay | 76% |
| Straw | 63% |
| Feed grain | 66% |
| Silage | 58% |
| Manure | 30% |
| Unknown | 5% |
| 2 month infant (n = 101) | |
| Regular exposure to cattle | 58% |
| Regular exposure to goats | 5% |
| Regular exposure to pigs | 8% |
| Regular exposure to poultry | 11% |
| Regular exposure to forageb | 35% |
| Regular farm milk ingestion | 1% |
| 9 month infant (n = 89) | |
| Regular exposure to cattle | 50% |
| Regular exposure to goats | 9% |
| Regular exposure to pigs | 9% |
| Regular exposure to poultry | 14% |
| Regular exposure to forage | 44% |
| Regular farm milk ingestion | 2% |
aRegular is defined as weekly or greater frequency
bForage is defined as hay, haylage, or silage
Fig. 3Number and type of biospecimens collected to date for the WISC study