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Bathing Babies and Allergy (BBA)

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University of Virginia

Status

Completed

Conditions

Atopic Dermatitis
Allergy

Study type

Observational

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

Details and patient eligibility

About

Atopic dermatitis (AD) is a chronic allergic skin disease with onset in early childhood and increasing prevalence in Westernized countries. Current well newborn guidelines for washing babies with soap were adopted by U.S. hospitals in the 1970s, before the rise in prevalence of allergic disease and AD (also called eczema). Increased transepidermal water-loss (TEWL) in newborn skin at 2 days of life was recently identified as a predictor of AD and allergy development by age 2 years. Risk for AD in babies was also linked to decreased skin colonization with certain skin microflora, such as staphylococcal organisms. Together, these data raise the question of whether newborn skincare guidelines have the potential to modify a baby's risk for allergy development. Our current practice of washing babies with soap may alter TEWL or other natural factors in skin that protect babies from development of AD and allergy. More knowledge is needed about the impact of infant skincare practices on allergy development.

The objective of this pilot study is to determine the impact of a baby's first bath on his/her transepidermal water loss (TEWL) and skin microflora. Study procedures will include collection of TEWL measurements and skin swabs for skin microflora analysis pre/post first bath in healthy term newborns at UVA. This data will serve as preliminary data for future studies.

Full description

The UVA study team will perform all study-related procedures and will collect all data. Contact information and permission for the study team to contact the subject's family will be obtained at enrollment.

Pre-bath Procedures: Prior to the first bath, a study team member will:

  1. Record health information about the subject.
  2. Record the amount of vernix covering the subject's skin.
  3. Measure skin TEWL (see TEWL below).
  4. Procure skin swabs for microflora analysis (see Skin swabs below)

Post-bath Procedures: Following the subject's first bath, a study team member will repeat pre-bath procedures.

TEWL Procedure TEWL measurement will be performed using the Tewameter - a non-invasive, wand-like instrument that sits atop skin like a stethoscope and measures the water evaporating from the skin. TEWL is a validated non-invasive procedure for assessment of newborn skin integrity.

Skin Swabs Skin swabs, softer than Q-tips, will be wiped across the skin with soft pressure to allow transfer of the baby's skin microflora onto the swab for analysis of skin-colonizing microorganisms, according to established methods.

AD and allergy development by 2 years The medical charts of enrolled subjects will be reviewed at 24 months of life to determine the incidence of any physician-diagnosis of AD or allergic disease. Subjects who have no physician-diagnosis of AD or allergy in their medical record will be contacted according to the contact information they provided at enrollment. Investigators will get a medical release signed with informed consent so the study team can contact the PCP of the subject if they are not followed at UVA.

None of these procedures are part of routine care in newborns. All procedures are being done solely for research purposes and pose minimal risk to subjects.

Enrollment

28 patients

Sex

All

Ages

Under 72 hours old

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Healthy term (>36 weeks GA) baby
  • Born at UVA
  • Admitted to the well newborn nursery
  • Baby's mother is at least 18 years old and capable of providing informed consent

Exclusion criteria

  • Babies born to cognitively-impaired mothers (unable to provide consent).
  • Babies of prisoners.
  • Babies of non-English speaking mothers (due to limited resources available for study conduct).
  • Any other condition that in the opinion of the investigator would jeopardize the safety or rights of a participant or would render the participants unable to comply with the protocol.

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Central trial contact

Katherine A Boguszewski; Julia Wisniewski, MD

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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