TY - JOUR
T1 - Cohort profile
T2 - The Growing up Healthy Study (GUHS)—A prospective and observational cohort study investigating the long-term health outcomes of offspring conceived after assisted reproductive technologies
AU - Hart, Roger J.
AU - Penova-Veselinovic, Blagica
AU - Wijs, Laura A.
AU - Yovich, John L.
AU - Burton, Peter
N1 - Funding Information:
Funding:RJHwasawardedaNationalHealthand MedicalResearchCouncil(NHMRC)Grant(Hart etal.,ID1042269)whichfundedtheGrowingUp HealthyStudy.Thefundershadnoroleinstudy design,datacollectionandanalysis,decisionto publish,orpreparationofthemanuscript.
Funding Information:
RJH was awarded a National Health and Medical Research Council (NHMRC) Grant (Hart et al., ID 1042269) which funded the Growing Up Healthy Study. The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript. We would like to acknowledge the GUHS participants and families for their cooperation in the study. The following GUHS co-investigators: Craig Pennell, Robert Norman, David Mackey, John Newnham, Leon Straker, Wendy Oddy, John Walsh, and Andrew Whitehouse. Valuable input was sought from the following Raine Study researchers/co-investigators: Phillip Melton (genetics), Rae-Chi Huang (genetics and cardiometabolic) Lawrie Beilin, Trevor Mori, Oyekoya Ayonrinde, Leon Adams, John Olynyk (cardiometabolic), Vijay Panicker (thyroid), Peter Sly, Patrick Holt, Graham Hall (asthma and allergy) and Monique Robinson (mental health). The GUHS research staff—cohort management and data collection (Rhiannon Halse, Tina Ludlow-Hoyer, Tina Barrow, Paige Sweeney, Rhea Urs, Zoe Faulkner, Dianne Loh, Elisha White, Annegret Harries, Michelle Tickner, Sharon Gam, Laila Robertson, Jacinta Saldaris, Nicole Crisp, Jessinta Brown, Monique Priston, Alex D’Vauz, Dianne Wood, Jenny Mountain, Natasha Haynes, Jan Dickinson, Laura Fender, Ben Horobin, Michelle Pedretti, Ronita Wheeler, Adriana Ottaviano, Suzanne Green, Seyhan Yazar, Jennifer Palmer, Heidi Shukralla, Lindsey Edwards, Sarah Duff, Sarah Rylance, Morweena Jaggard, Eugenia Elingworth). Dorota Doherty and James Humphreys for statistical support. PIVET Medical Centre and Concept Fertility Centre for providing IVF data. PathWest Laboratory Medicine–Perth, Western Australia for fasting biochemistry sample collection. The Department of Health Western Australia, Midwives Notification System for data regarding pregnancy. We would like to acknowledge the Raine Study participants and their families for their ongoing participation in the study and the Raine Study team for study co-ordination and data collection.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2022 Penova-Veselinovic et al. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
PY - 2022/7
Y1 - 2022/7
N2 - Worldwide, over 8 million children and adults are conceived following assisted reproductive technologies (ART), and their long-term health is of consequential public health interest. The objective of this paper is to describe the Growing up Healthy Study (GUHS) cohort in detail, publicise it and invite collaboration. Combining the data collected in the GUHS with other cohorts or databases will improve the much-needed knowledge about the effects of ART, and allow for better understanding of the long-term health outcomes of offspring conceived after ART. The GUHS cohort is a prospective observational study of adolescents and young adults conceived after assisted reproductive technologies (ART). It was established to determine if the long-term health of offspring conceived by ART differs from that of the general population. This was investigated by comparing a substantial number of health parameters to those of a representative population of offspring conceived without ART. The n = 303 GUHS participants were born between 1991–2001 in the two fertility clinics operating at the time in Perth, Western Australia, and undertook assessments at ages 14, 17 and 20, replicating the pre-defined study protocols from the reference cohort—the Raine Study. Participants were comprehensively phenotyped through detailed questionnaires, anthropometry, biochemical analyses, as well as age-specific assessments (asthma, atopy, cardiometabolic health, body composition, mental health, thyroid function, epigenetics and vision). To date the GUHS cohort has been used to study the methylation, cardiometabolic, and thyroid profiles, as well as respiratory and mental health. To summarise, the GUHS cohort provides a valuable addition to the limited knowledge of the long-term health outcomes of ART-conceived offspring.
AB - Worldwide, over 8 million children and adults are conceived following assisted reproductive technologies (ART), and their long-term health is of consequential public health interest. The objective of this paper is to describe the Growing up Healthy Study (GUHS) cohort in detail, publicise it and invite collaboration. Combining the data collected in the GUHS with other cohorts or databases will improve the much-needed knowledge about the effects of ART, and allow for better understanding of the long-term health outcomes of offspring conceived after ART. The GUHS cohort is a prospective observational study of adolescents and young adults conceived after assisted reproductive technologies (ART). It was established to determine if the long-term health of offspring conceived by ART differs from that of the general population. This was investigated by comparing a substantial number of health parameters to those of a representative population of offspring conceived without ART. The n = 303 GUHS participants were born between 1991–2001 in the two fertility clinics operating at the time in Perth, Western Australia, and undertook assessments at ages 14, 17 and 20, replicating the pre-defined study protocols from the reference cohort—the Raine Study. Participants were comprehensively phenotyped through detailed questionnaires, anthropometry, biochemical analyses, as well as age-specific assessments (asthma, atopy, cardiometabolic health, body composition, mental health, thyroid function, epigenetics and vision). To date the GUHS cohort has been used to study the methylation, cardiometabolic, and thyroid profiles, as well as respiratory and mental health. To summarise, the GUHS cohort provides a valuable addition to the limited knowledge of the long-term health outcomes of ART-conceived offspring.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85134771761&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1371/journal.pone.0272064
DO - 10.1371/journal.pone.0272064
M3 - Article
C2 - 35867723
AN - SCOPUS:85134771761
VL - 17
JO - PLoS One
JF - PLoS One
SN - 1932-6203
IS - 7 July
M1 - e0272064
ER -