Project Details
Description
DESCRIPTION (Adapted from applicant's abstract): The Prenatal Determinants
of Schizophrenia study will investigate the relation between prenatal
exposures and schizophrenia. The study will be based on a cohort of 11,799
individuals born in Oakland in 1959-1966 who have been followed since early
gestation as part of the Child Health and Development Study. The cohort are
now in the age of risk for schizophrenia. The strengths of the study
include a large and representative sample of births, a rich array of data on
early prenatal exposures, an excellent registry for ascertainment of cases
of schizophrenia and thorough diagnostic assessments of the cases. In
addition, stored prenatal maternal sera are available for the collection of
new exposure on future studies.
The study aims first to investigate whether prenatal exposures are
associated with an increased incidence of schizophrenia and of schizophrenia
spectrum disorders. The prenatal exposures that can be examined include a
broad range of exposures--infectious, nutritional, toxic, immune and
hormonal--that could affect brain development. To illustrate our approach,
we focus here on the a priori testing of a small number of prenatal
exposures that are plausible risk factors for schizophrenia, namely,
maternal use of prescribed amphetamines, maternal use of alcohol and rhesus
(Rh) incompatibility.
The second aim is to suggest causal pathways that may underlie observed
associations between prenatal exposures and the risk of schizophrenia. The
pathways will be examined using the comprehensive data on maternal and
paternal characteristics, intrapatum events and the condition of the infant
at birth that are available for this cohort. These data enable a thorough
analysis of potential confounding and mediating variables and of effect
modification.
The third aim is to prepare the groundwork for a future case-control study
that will be 'nested' in this cohort. The case-control study will use the
stored prenatal maternal sera to obtain new exposure data, also potentially
available for a wide range of exposures. To illustrate the necessary
groundwork, we describe the preparatory work for an investigation of
low-normal maternal folate as a risk factor for schizophrenia.
The present application requests three years of funding to complete the
PDS-Coh study and only the groundwork for the case-control study; a separate
application for the case-control study will be submitted toward the end of
that period.
Status | Finished |
---|---|
Effective start/end date | 1/1/97 → 12/31/00 |
Funding
- National Institute of Mental Health
ASJC Scopus Subject Areas
- Pediatrics, Perinatology, and Child Health
- Psychiatry and Mental health
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