The Brain Imaging for Global Health (BRIGHT) Project: Longitudinal cohort study protocol.

Gates Open Research Pub Date : 2024-09-05 eCollection Date: 2023-01-01 DOI:10.12688/gatesopenres.14795.2
Sarah Lloyd-Fox, Sam McCann, Bosiljka Milosavljevic, Laura Katus, Anna Blasi, Chiara Bulgarelli, Maria Crespo-Llado, Giulia Ghillia, Tijan Fadera, Ebrima Mbye, Luke Mason, Fabakary Njai, Omar Njie, Marta Perapoch-Amado, Maria Rozhko, Fatima Sosseh, Mariama Saidykhan, Ebou Touray, Sophie E Moore, Clare E Elwell
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Abstract

There is a scarcity of prospective longitudinal research targeted at early postnatal life which maps developmental pathways of early-stage processing and brain specialisation in the context of early adversity. Follow up from infancy into the one-five year age range is key, as it constitutes a critical gap between infant and early childhood studies. Availability of portable neuroimaging (functional near infrared spectroscopy (fNIRS) and electroencephalography (EEG)) has enabled access to rural settings increasing the diversity of our sampling and broadening developmental research to include previously underrepresented ethnic-racial and geographical groups in low- and middle- income countries (LMICs). The primary objective of the Brain Imaging for Global Health (BRIGHT) project was to establish brain function - using longitudinal data from mother - for-age reference curves infant dyads living in the UK and rural Gambia and investigate the association between context-associated moderators and developmental trajectories across the first two years of life in The Gambia. In total, 265 participating families were seen during pregnancy, at 7-14 days, 1-, 5-, 8-, 12-, 18- and 24-months post-partum. An additional visit is now underway at 3-5 years to assess pre-school outcomes. The majority of our Gambian cohort live in poverty, but while resource-poor in many factors they commonly experience a rich and beneficial family and caregiving context with multigenerational care and a close-knit supportive community. Understanding the impact of different factors at play in such an environment ( i.e., detrimental undernutrition versus beneficial multigenerational family support) will (i) improve the representativeness of models of general cognitive developmental pathways from birth, (ii) identify causal pathways of altered trajectories associated with early adversity at both individual and group level, and (iii) identify the context-associated moderators ( i.e. social context) that protect development despite the presence of poverty-associated challenges. This will in turn contribute to the development of targeted interventions.

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大脑成像促进全球健康(BRIGHT)项目:纵向队列研究协议。
目前,针对出生后早期生活的前瞻性纵向研究还很匮乏,这些研究描绘了早期逆境背景下早期处理和大脑特化的发展路径。从婴儿期到一至五岁的跟踪研究非常关键,因为这是婴儿期研究与幼儿期研究之间的关键空白。便携式神经成像(功能性近红外光谱(fNIRS)和脑电图(EEG))的出现使我们能够进入农村环境,增加了取样的多样性,并将发育研究扩大到了中低收入国家(LMICs)以前代表性不足的种族和地域群体。全球健康脑成像(BRIGHT)项目的主要目标是利用生活在英国和冈比亚农村地区的母亲-年龄参考曲线婴儿二元组的纵向数据建立脑功能,并调查冈比亚婴儿出生后头两年的环境相关调节因素与发育轨迹之间的关联。共有 265 个参与家庭在孕期、产后 7-14 天、1-、5-、8-、12-、18-和 24 个月时接受了访问。目前正在进行 3-5 岁的额外访问,以评估学前教育成果。我们的大多数冈比亚同龄人都生活在贫困中,虽然在很多因素上资源贫乏,但他们通常都经历了一个丰富而有益的家庭和照顾环境,拥有多代人的照顾和一个紧密团结的支持性社区。了解在这种环境中不同因素(即有害的营养不良与有益的多代家庭支持)的影响将(i)提高从出生开始的一般认知发展途径模型的代表性,(ii)确定在个人和群体层面与早期逆境相关的轨迹改变的因果途径,以及(iii)确定与环境相关的调节因素(即社会环境),尽管存在与贫困相关的挑战,这些因素仍能保护儿童的发展。这将有助于制定有针对性的干预措施。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Gates Open Research
Gates Open Research Immunology and Microbiology-Immunology and Microbiology (miscellaneous)
CiteScore
3.60
自引率
0.00%
发文量
90
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