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Analysis of Mother-child Interaction and Regulation of Candidate Genes of Stress Signaling Pathways in Mature Infants

U

University of Cologne

Status

Completed

Conditions

Mother-Child Interaction

Treatments

Other: no intervention

Study type

Observational

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT03926923
19-1118

Details and patient eligibility

About

The planned study will investigate the quality of mother-child interaction at the age of 6 months as well as the expression and methylation of candidate genes of stress signaling pathway in mature infants.

At best, mother and the healthy, term newborn are undisturbed after birth. This creates optimal conditions for the development of a good mother-child interaction. The results of the mother-child interaction and the molecular genetic investigations will be compared to the results of the randomized controlled delivery room skin-to-skin study (deisy, clinicaltrial.gov identifier: NCT 01959737). This study showed a significant difference in the mother-child interaction and expression of candidate genes in preterm infants with or without skin-to-skin contact after birth.

The investigators hypothesize that the quality of mother-child interaction at the age of six months will be better in term newborns without postpartal separation of mother and child than in preterm infants with or without skin contact after birth. The second hypothesis is that there will be a difference in the expression and methylation of candidate genes of stress signaling pathway in these infants.

Full description

A separation of mother and child after birth can influence the quality of mother-child interaction and the regulation of stress signaling pathways. Maternal depression, parental stress and socioeconomic status can also affect the quality of mother-child interaction.

A former controlled randomized delivery room skin-to-skin study (deisy) showed, that skin contact of preterm infants and their mothers after birth improves the mother-child interaction. It also leads to a differential expression of candidate genes of the stress signaling pathways, which suggests a long term effect on mechanisms in stress response. The study group should now be compared to a group of mature infants with a normal, uninterrupted postnatal course.

The hypothesis is that the intervention in the deisy study (early skin-to-skin contact of preterm infants and their mothers) improves the mother-child interaction so that it is nearly comparable to mature infants with uninterrupted mother-child contact after birth. Furthermore it is assumed that the expression and methylation of candidate genes of the stress signaling pathways will be influenced by the intervention in the same way.

The mother-child interaction will be evaluated at the age of six months with a standardized method (Mannheim Rating Scales). Questionnaires about maternal depression, social support, socio-economic status, parental stress and mother-child relationship disorders as well as samples for the molecular genetic testing will be collected on the third day of life and at the age of six months. For the molecular genetic testing one blood sample and buccal swabs will be taken. The blood sample will not be done additionally but with a routine blood sampling on the third day of life (screening of inborn errors of metabolism).

Enrollment

100 patients

Sex

All

Ages

1 to 3 days old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • mature newborn (38 to 41 weeks of gestational age)
  • first child
  • no separation of mother and child for three hours after birth
  • informed consent

Exclusion criteria

  • multiples
  • malformations or syndromes in the infant
  • maternal psychological or severe physical illness

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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