4.7 Article

Cohort Profile: Project Viva

Journal

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF EPIDEMIOLOGY
Volume 44, Issue 1, Pages 37-48

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/ije/dyu008

Keywords

Pregnancy; cohort; obesity; nutrition; childhood

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [R01 HD 034568, R01 HL 075504, R01 HL 64925, R01 MH 068596, R01 HD 064925, R01 ES 016314, U54 CA155626, R37 HD 034568, R01 AI 102960, R03 DE14004, P30 ES000002]
  2. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention [200-95-0957]
  3. Environmental Protection Agency [RD83479801]
  4. March of Dimes Foundation
  5. Harvard Pilgrim Health Care Foundation
  6. National Institutes of Health. [R21 DK 073739, R21 DK 082661, R01 MD 003963, RC1 HD 063590, R01 HD 034568-0951, R01 ES21447, R01 NR013945, R01 HL111108, K24 HL 068041, K23 HD 044807, T32 DK 081505, K23 DK083817, K24 HD069408, K12 DK094721]

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We established Project Viva to examine prenatal diet and other factors in relation to maternal and child health. We recruited pregnant women at their initial prenatal visit in eastern Massachusetts between 1999 and 2002. Exclusion criteria included multiple gestation, inability to answer questions in English, gestational age >= 22 weeks at recruitment and plans to move away before delivery. We completed in-person visits with mothers during pregnancy in the late first (median 9.9 weeks of gestation) and second (median 27.9 weeks) trimesters. We saw mothers and children in the hospital during the delivery admission and during infancy (median age 6.3 months), early childhood (median 3.2 years) and mid-childhood (median 7.7 years). We collected information from mothers via interviews and questionnaires, performed anthropometric and neurodevelopmental assessments and collected biosamples. We have collected additional information from medical records and from mailed questionnaires sent annually to mothers between in-person visits and to children beginning at age 9 years. From 2341 eligible women, there were 2128 live births; 1279 mother-child pairs provided data at the mid-childhood visit. Primary study outcomes include pregnancy outcomes, maternal mental and cardiometabolic health and child neurodevelopment, asthma/atopy and obesity/cardiometabolic health. Investigators interested in learning more about how to obtain Project Viva data can contact Project_Viva@hphc.org.

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