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The goal of this clinical trial is to test the Nurse Family Partnership (NFP) in mothers with previous live births (multiparous or multip individuals). The main aims are:
Specific Aim 1-Determine the effectiveness of NFP among multiparous women for reducing maternal morbidity and improving pregnancy outcomes.
Specific Aim 2-Determine the effectiveness of NFP among index children (child from pregnancy when mother was enrolled) of multiparous women for improving child outcomes.
Specific Aim 3 (Exploratory)-In preparation for a future study of the effects of preventive home-visiting programs on mother-index child-sibling triads, describe siblings (characteristics, role, influence) in the context of nurse home-visiting and evaluate the effectiveness of NFP on outcomes for prior-born siblings younger than 6 years old living in the home, including cognitive development, socioemotional development, and identification and referral to needed services.
A supplemental study to this study, led by investigators at Yale and Columbia, includes the following Aims:
Aim 1: Test whether the NFP causes variation in DNAm at Glucocorticoid-sensitive sites in infants over the first year of life.
Aim 2: Determine whether NFP causes differences in epigenetic age in infants over the first year of life.
Aim 3: Evaluate DNAm signatures as predictors of infant development at 12 months of age.
Full description
The proposed study will be conducted in partnership with two or more NFP sites in Columbus and Dayton, Ohio. Investigators will work with pregnancy resource referral centers to identify a process that fits into each site's flow for identifying and recruiting eligible multiparous pregnant women at 32 weeks EGA (estimated gestational age) or less to participate in the study. The study will recruit 500 women to participate. Half will be receiving NFP and half will be receiving any other community services available outside of NFP. Researchers will compare the intervention group with the control group to test the effects described in the Aims above (as outlined in the following hypotheses).
Hypothesis 1-Compared to multiparous women who receive usual care, women who receive NFP will have reductions in pregnancy-related hypertension and tobacco use.
Hypothesis 2-Compared to children of women who receive usual care, those whose mothers receive NFP will have improved language development.
Supplemental study hypotheses:
Hypothesis 1: maternal NFP participation causes DNAm variation at glucocorticoid-sensitive sites across the genome at birth, controlling for genetic ancestry
Hypothesis 2: NFP participation reduces DNAm age acceleration from birth to 12 months of age, controlling for genetic variation.
Hypothesis 3: Glucocorticoid-sensitive DNAm and epigenetic aging in offspring measured across infancy (birth to 12 months) will correlate with infant development at 12 months.
Women will be asked to participate in four data collection episodes at study enrollment/baseline (prior to 36 weeks gestation), 6 to 8 weeks postpartum, and child ages 6 and 9 months, and (if consented), to an additional visit at child age 12 months for the supplemental DNAm study.
Researchers will use the following data sources for this study: 1) data routinely collected by the NFP team to determine enrollment and engagement in the NFP program of study participants randomized to NFP; 2) self-administered and interview surveys of study participants collected by the research assistant; 3) formal observation-based assessment tools (such as the Bayley assessment of child development) administered by the research assistant; 4) videos of parent-child interactions recorded by the research assistant and coded by parenting experts; 5) data from medical record review of mothers and their children; 6) birth certificate data; 7) buccal cell samples (infants) collected by the research assistant or self-collected by the participant with guidance from the research assistant.
The research assistants will conduct all the primary data collection from mother-child dyads who have agreed to participate in the trial, and primary data collection will be separate from NFP program delivery which will be conducted by the NFP nurses. Primary data collection will occur at 4 time points as described above. Primary data collection will occur in the participants' homes or at another location where the participant and research assistant feel comfortable (such as a meeting room in a public library). The majority of measures could be collected in a variety of settings with the exception of the video-taped interactions between parents and children which would ideally occur in the child's natural environment. The post partum and 6 month visits only involve maternal report measures and can be conducted by telephone/video using online surveys, unless the participant consents to the cheek swab at the post partum visit, which would be collected in-person.
The research assistant will record where each data collection episode occurred. The research assistant will also record all attempts made to contact study participants for data collection and missed episodes of data collection (i.e., if a visit were arranged and the participant were not available). The research assistant will be trained regarding appropriate collection, transport, and storage procedures for biologic samples and will be trained to conduct the Bayley assessment of child development.
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23 participants in 2 patient groups
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Natalie J Murphy
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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