(HOUSTON – OCT. 3, 2008) - Texas Children's Hospital is
part of a consortium of local researchers, led by Baylor
College of Medicine, who will take part in the
largest-ever National Institutes of Health study of
children. The study will evaluate the long term
environmental and genetic effects on youngsters’ health
from before conception to age 21 years.
The National Children’s Study (NCS) is the largest such
research project ever undertaken in the United States
and will involve at least 100,000 youngsters as
participants over a 21-year period. Locally, researchers
will enroll approximately 1,000 children with future
funding to enroll an additional 1,000. The local arm of
the study will be called the Harris County Hospitals and
Universities National Children’s Study (HC-HUNCS). The
NIH granted the consortium a $14.4 million, five-year
contract for the Harris County Study location.
“This is such a landmark study of genetic and
environmental effects on child health,” said Dr. Claudia
Kozinetz, epidemiologist at Texas Children’s Hospital,
associate professor of pediatrics at BCM and the
principal investigator of the Harris County Study
Center. “It begins with the health of women who hope to
conceive. It follows pregnant mothers through birth and
will follow their children until adulthood. There’s
never been a study so encompassing. This will be yet
another strong model for collaboration among the top
institutes of the Texas Medical Center.”
The local collaborators are BCM and Texas Children’s
Hospital, The University of Texas Health Science Center
at Houston, UT M. D. Anderson Cancer Center at Houston,
UT San Antonio, Houston Department of Health and Human
Services and Battelle Memorial Institute, a large
independent, non-profit research organization.
Researchers will gather environmental and social
information from participants including clinical health
history, nutrition and demographics. They will gather
biologic samples and environmental samples including
air, dust and soil from the participants’ environments.
Data collection is expected to begin in Harris County in
2011, once researchers determine the segments of the
County for inclusion, said Kozinetz, also director of
the Epidemiology Center at Texas Children’s Hospital and
BCM.
The Harris County site is one of 36 new and existing
study centers that would recruit study volunteers from a
total of 72 locations. When it is fully operational, the
study is expected to include from 36 to 50 study centers
in the planned 105 study locations throughout the United
States.“The first phase of the National Children’s Study
will center around pregnancy and pregnancy outcomes,
early infant health and early neurodevelopment,” said
Kozinetz.
Kozinetz anticipates a host of ancillary studies to
accompany this one, putting Texas Children, BCM and
Houston at the forefront of such environmental research.
“This is a truly significant endeavor and its findings
will benefit all,” said Kozinetz.
Key investigators on the study from Texas Children's
Hospital and Baylor College of Medicine include Drs.
Stuart Abramson, Pediatric Allergy and Immunology,
Chantal Caviness, Pediatric Emergency Medicine, Charleta
Guillory, Neonatology, Marc Hanfling, General
Pediatrics, Lane Strathearn, Developmental Pediatrics,
and Kjersti Aagaard-Tillery, OB/Gyn, at Texas Children’s
Maternity Center. Other investigators include Drs. Sean
Blackwell, Beatrice Selwyn, Ken Sexton, all of UTHSC-H,
Drs. Melissa Bondy and Michele Forman of M.D. Anderson,
Dr. Cathy Troisi of the HDHHS, Dr. Lowell Sever of the
Battelle Memorial Institute and Dr. Karl Eschbach of
UTSA.
Funding for this study comes from the Eunice Kennedy
Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human
Development and the National Institute of Environmental
Health Sciences, the Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention, and the U.S. Environmental Protection
Agency.
For more information on the study, visit
nationalchildrensstudy.gov.
About Texas Children's Hospital
Texas Children's Hospital is committed to a community of healthy
children by providing the finest pediatric patient care, education
and research. Renowned worldwide for its expertise and breakthrough
developments in clinical care and research, Texas Children’s is
ranked in the top ten best children’s hospitals by U.S. News and
World Report. Texas Children’s also operates the nation’s largest
primary pediatric care network, with over 40 offices throughout the
greater Houston community. Texas Children’s has embarked on a
$1.5 Billion expansion, Vision 2010, which includes a Neurological
Research Institute, a comprehensive obstetrics facility focusing on
high risk births, and a community hospital in suburban West Houston.