Nurses Health Study 3: A multiple exposure environmental epidemiology cohort of young adults

NIH RePORTER · NIH · R24 · $59,015 · view on reporter.nih.gov ↗

Abstract

PROJECT SUMMARY OF PARENT PROJECT (R24ES028521) This is an R24 application to support the infrastructure of our environmental epidemiology cohort, Nurses’ Health Study 3 (NHS3), an open, prospective, web-based cohort (www.nhs3.org). Participants are residence of the United States and Canada born after 1965. Most of the female participants (89%) have enrolled before menopause and 41% of female participants and 62% ofmale participants have no prior pregnancy history. In this innovative web-based study, we have been collecting detailed information on personal characteristics and potential disease risk factors every 6 months, including diet, physical activity, psychosocial factors, and a wide variety of occupational and environmental exposures. Data collection has focused on current exposures, as well as those experienced during adolescence, prior to first pregnancy, and during pregnancy.Discoveries made in NHS3 will build on the knowledge and experience gained from earlier cohorts on the impacts of the environment on chronic disease risk but takes advantage of modern technology to collect novel prospective data during important windows of exposure across the life course. The NHS3 investigators have substantial experience in environmental epidemiology,exposure assessment, and Big Data analytics, as well as in managing and maintaining large prospective cohort studies. This cohort provides a unique opportunity to address key outstanding questions in environmental epidemiology, by collecting highly detailed information on multiple environmental exposures at key points in the life course. The R24 supports infrastructure activities in the expanded NHS3 cohort thatmaximize the existing resources and broaden the current scope of research, to allow the investigation of multiple environmental exposures. We will focus our efforts in three main areas: 1) the expansion of study operations and maximization of existing resources, 2) the collection of environmental exposure samples, and 3) expansion of web-based mobile technologies and assessment of spatial uncertainty and measurement error. We have partnered with U01HL145386 to collect biologic samples (blood, urine, stool) concurrently with the environment exposure samples. This administrative supplement will allow us to prepare cost-effective lab-ready vials of both biologic and environmental specimens at the time of collection.

Key facts

NIH application ID
10440077
Project number
3R24ES028521-04S1
Recipient
HARVARD UNIVERSITY D/B/A HARVARD SCHOOL OF PUBLIC HEALTH
Principal Investigator
Jorge Eduardo Chavarro
Activity code
R24
Funding institute
NIH
Fiscal year
2021
Award amount
$59,015
Award type
3
Project period
2021-09-10 → 2022-06-30