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Epipage 2 (Epidemiological study on small gestational ages) is a prospective population-based national cohort implemented to better understand the short, mid and long term future of premature children.
This study was launched on 28 March 2011 by the researchers of the EPOPé team (Perinatal, Obstetric and Pediatric Epidemiology Research) of the Epidemiology and Biostatistics Research Centre (INSERM U1153), in collaboration with the Inserm 1027 Unit (Epidemiology and Analysis in Public Health: risks, chronic diseases and handicaps) and medical teams of public health and research in 25 French regions.
The study focuses on children born before 35 weeks of amenorrhea.
3 follow-up steps for children included in the cohort have already been completed at 1, 2 and 5 and a half years of age. Currently, nearly 4,000 children are still eligible for follow-up.
Since the children are 9 years old, the follow-up steps are shared with those set up in another birth cohort, the Elfe cohort (Étude Longitudinale Française depuis l'Enfance, (www.elfe-france.fr) ), as part of the RE-CO-NAI project.
The RE-CO-NAI project is a research platform on cohorts of children followed since birth in order to be able to study in a global and multidisciplinary way the major issues of the health, development and socialization of children.
This RE-CO-NAI project was funded by the EQUIPEX 2011 call for projects as part of future investments.
This protocol, which is part of the RECONAI project, concerns the fully shared follow-up phase, proposed in the 10th year for the children of the two cohorts.
Full description
The objectives of this new follow-up phase are to study:
Study design:
The 10 and a half year follow-up phase is a Category 2 Human Person Research (IHRP 2).
Study population The study population corresponds to all children who have participated in the Epipage 2 cohort since birth and whose parents did not wish to stop follow-up in the study. In total, nearly 4,000 children will be invited to participate in this new follow-up phase.
Methodology:
This follow-up phase will take place in 3 steps:
A telephone interview with one of the parents living regularly with the child. Parents will be asked to answer several questions concerning their family situation, the school (homework, school support), the health, sleep and nutrition of the child, the general health and mental health of the parent interviewed, the employment situation, the living conditions and educational practices of the family.
The home visit of the families of an investigator who will propose to the families several activities:
Biological samples from the child (blood, urine, saliva hair)
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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