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The Impact of an Evidence-Based Parenting Service on Maternal Sensitivity and Infant Cellular Aging in a Population of Under-Resourced Families

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University of Washington

Status

Enrolling

Conditions

Epigenetic Aging
Telomere Length
Parent Child Relationship
Child Social-Emotional Development

Treatments

Behavioral: Promoting First Relationships in Primary Care (PFR-PC)

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other
NIH

Identifiers

NCT06740266
R01NR021020 (U.S. NIH Grant/Contract)
STUDY00019057

Details and patient eligibility

About

The goal of this clinical trial study is to learn how stress in childhood, or Early Life Adversity (ELA), gets "under the skin" and influences long-term health. The investigators will test if the support given to parents of young children reduces childhood stress. The investigators will also test if the effects of mother's stress and Early Life Adversity can be passed down to children. Can it impact the child's long-term health? Researchers will compare the Promoting First Relationships® in Primary Care (PFR in PC) parenting program with Usual Care to see if PFR reduces mothers' stress, improves mother's sensitivity, and reduces accelerated cellular aging.

Participants will:

  • Be randomized to receive PFR in PC or Usual Care. PFR in PC is an evidence-based 10-week home visiting service, with 2 extra sessions at the WakeMed pediatric clinic. Usual Care is the health care and general services offered to families at the WakeMed pediatric clinic.

  • Have in-home research visits at the start of the study (Time 1, T1), about 6 months later (Time 2, T2), and 12 months later (Time 3, T3). Information collected at these visits includes:

    • Answering questions about your background, past and current stress, physical and mental health, parenting behaviors, and child behavior problems (T1, T2, T3).
    • Being videotaped doing a short teaching activity.
    • Having a small amount of blood collected from the mother by finger prick (T1, T3).
    • Having a small amount of blood collected from the infant by heel stick (T1, T3).

Full description

Early life adversity (ELA) is a salient risk factor for later-life morbidity and early mortality. During the first years of life, children are particularly vulnerable to adverse events. Notably, these adversities are disproportionately placed on families of color and can lead to health disparities. Cellular aging is a potential mechanism by which ELA confers lifelong risks. Interventions implemented during sensitive developmental periods early in life may yield a higher efficacy and reduce health disparities. The aim of the proposed randomized controlled trial (RCT) is to test if an evidence-based home visiting model, Promoting First Relationships® (PFR), that improves caregiver sensitive and responsive care, when embedded within a primary care setting, will protect young infants from the effect of stress on accelerated cellular aging.

Telomeres, the structures at the end of chromosomes, are considered a marker for cellular aging. Telomeres shorten with each cell division and this can lead to cellular senescence, one of the key hallmarks of aging. Shorter telomere length (TL) is associated with poorer physical and mental health outcomes. In addition to TL, "epigenetic clocks", which are composed of dozens or hundreds of methylation marks, predict mortality and are linked with disability and disease processes. There is preliminary evidence that epigenetic age (EpiAge) is accelerated by perinatal risk exposures and lifetime adversity, and that stress-related mechanisms forecast accelerated EpiAge. The literature has shown that TL and EpiAge are malleable and receptive to environmental inputs, interventions that focus on family support and a healthy lifestyle, as well as parental sensitivity, which operates as a protective factor.

The investigators have an incredible opportunity to advance the field to understand the impact of past and present stressors, caregiver sensitive and responsive care, on infant cellular aging (including both TL and EpiAge clocks), in a sample of under-resourced families receiving PFR through their primary care setting. PFR is a 10-week home visiting model that has, in five prior RCTs, consistently improved caregiver sensitivity and responsive care, as well as parental knowledge of children's social-emotional needs. PFR has shown improvements at the biological level in children through Respiratory Sinus Arrhythmia, a marker of emotional regulation, and stimulated cortisol responses. This study will expand upon these findings and will be the first to evaluate PFR, delivered in the context of primary care (PFR-PC), on children's cellular aging.

The setting for this study is unique. WakeMed Primary Care in North Carolina is a busy pediatric practice that utilizes an integrated care model to serve a high-need patient population. Their aim is to reduce disparities through services embedded within primary care. WakeMed's pediatric practice serves nearly 7,000 families in one of the highest-need zip codes in the state. Of their highly diverse patients, 90% receive Medicaid. Embedding PFR within a primary care setting is an innovative strategy to facilitate an integrated care model and to enhance resilency in minoritized lower income families. In this RCT, we will recruit a low-income, community sample of 250 Spanish- and English-Speaking mothers and their infants receiving primary care from WakeMed. Mothers will be randomized to Usual Care (UC) or to PFR in Primary Care (PFR-PC) 10-week home visiting with follow-up content during two well-child visits. We will collect dried blood spots from mothers and children to evaluate TL and various EpiAge clocks. We will also advance the literature by accounting for important heritability factors (i.e., maternal TL at baseline) and intergenerational controls (i.e., maternal Adverse Childhood Experiences (ACEs) and paternal age at conception). The investigators will measure mothers' TL at baseline and child TL and EpiAge clocks at baseline and one-year post-baseline.

Aim 1: Evaluate three under-studied heritability and intergenerational predictors of cellular aging: Test whether 1) maternal TL, 2) maternal ACEs, and 3) paternal age at conception predict child baseline TL. It is hypothesize that heritability and intergenerational measures will predict child baseline TL. The investigators will further evaluate the effect of maternal ACEs on child EpiAge clocks at baseline.

Aim 2: Evaluate the impact of adversity on change in cellular aging. We will test if current adversity (caregiver depression, discrimination, violence, and difficult life events) predicts child cellular aging (TL and EpiAge clocks) between baseline and 12 months post-enrollment, controlling for heritability and intergenerational effects (Aim 1) and PFR-PC. It is hypothesize that children exposed to greater concurrent adversity will evidence accelerated cellular aging compared with children with less adversity.

Aim 3: Test whether PFR-PC reduces accelerated cellular aging. Test PFR-PC on change in TL and EpiAge among children in a population with high health disparities one-year post-intervention. It is hypothesize that 1) children in the PFR-PC treatment group will have significantly longer TL and younger EpiAge than those in the UC control group 1-year post enrollment. It is also hypothesize that 2) treatment difference in TL/EpiAge will be mediated by maternal sensitivity using standard mediation and that PFR will improve mother sensitivity and child behavior. Exploratory aim. Evaluate PFR-PC implementation (dosage, quality, acceptability, satisfaction, and provider fidelity). Based on prior studies, it is hypothesize that PFR will demonstrate successful implementation (dosage, quality, acceptability, satisfaction, and provider fidelity).

Enrollment

250 estimated patients

Sex

Female

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Biological mother of infant aged 3-12 months English- or Spanish-speaking Receiving Medicaid Their infant is receiving pediatric care at WakeMed

Exclusion criteria

  • Experiencing an acute crisis (e.g. hospitalization, incarceration) Homeless or without stable enough housing for home visits Lacking access to a phone Previously received the Promoting First Relationships intervention

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Single Blind

250 participants in 2 patient groups

Promoting First Relationships in Primary Care (PFR-PC)
Experimental group
Description:
PFR is a strengths-based, evidence-based home visiting approach to engage with families in ways that promote positive parenting change. PFR is a manualized training curriculum consisting of a 10-week (1 hour per visit) intervention. Each week has a theme for discussion and an activity. During five of the weekly sessions, the provider videotapes playtime between mother and child. On alternate weeks, the PFR provider and the mother watch the videotaped playtime and reflect about the needs of both the mother and the child. PFR-PC adds two additional visits at the medical home during routine well-child visits. PFR-PC is a manualized primary care delivery model with content that corresponds to developmentally appropriate content aligned with the well-child visits. Each family will receive two sessions at WakeMed during their well-child visits (approximately 20 minutes in length).
Treatment:
Behavioral: Promoting First Relationships in Primary Care (PFR-PC)
Usual care
No Intervention group
Description:
Usual care consists of routine pediatric medical well and sick care from WakeMed pediatrics, as well as already existing onsite integrated mental health and social work services.

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Central trial contact

Mary Jane Lohr, MS; Monica Oxford, PhD

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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