Adventures in the Design and Trial of an Innovative FASD Risk Assessment: Integrating Known Risks with New Measures of Weekly Prenatal Alcohol Exposure, Maternal Mental Health, and Paternal Alcohol
Project Number5R61AA030066-02
Contact PI/Project LeaderCHEATHAM, CAROL L
Awardee OrganizationUNIV OF NORTH CAROLINA CHAPEL HILL
Description
Abstract Text
Project Abstract/Summary
The two-phased research mechanism will permit us to design, pilot test, and validate the
efficacy of innovative new multivariate protocols for estimating actual risk for the birth of a
child with fetal alcohol spectrum disorders (FASD). In the R61 Phase we will research, create,
design, and pilot test new protocols for: 1) interviewing mothers (with biomarker validation) to
determine maternal alcohol consumption on a daily/weekly basis across pregnancy and
postpartum alcohol use during breastfeeding to assess their specific contributions to child traits
and severity of FASD outcomes; 2) determining maternal experience with stress, trauma, and
mental health status during pregnancy and their contribution to the severity of effect on FASD
diagnostic traits; 3) interviewing fathers regarding paternal traits that contribute to the risk for
FASD from exposure to teratogens such as alcohol, other drugs, and environmental toxins during
pre-conception; and 4) establishing a comprehensive, summary FASD risk score from the above
innovations when combined with multiple other empirically-established proximal and distal
variables of risk.
The R33 Phase will then initiate an exploration of a multivariate, comprehensive
approach to FASD risk via two applications for better understanding FASD etiology. One
application is prospective and the other retrospective. In the prospective study, 200 women (and
as many of their partners as we can consent) will be recruited from prenatal clinics, and their
offspring will be assessed at six weeks and nine months postpartum and diagnosed by pediatric
dysmorphologists and a multidisciplinary team. The second application of the new methods will
gather the new data retrospectively and link the data to two existing cohorts of maternal/child
dyads whom we have followed over time to assess their FASD status and the severity of their
physical, neurodevelopmental, and behavioral traits. Both of these studies will add new insight to
our long-term quest to understand more completely the respective contributions of a broad range
of host, agent, and environmental factors to the etiology of FASD. This R33 Phase will provide
substantial validation of the weekly alcohol use data, mental health status assessments, paternal
questionnaire, and FASD risk score innovations via the clinical assessment of the offspring of
each pregnancy. In developing this more comprehensive approach to FASD risk, both study
phases draw on our existing clinical epidemiology infrastructure, the experience of our multi-
disciplinary team, and the participants in existing longitudinal cohorts.
Public Health Relevance Statement
Project Narrative
We propose to design, pilot test, and validate the efficacy of innovative new multivariate
protocols for estimating risk for fetal alcohol spectrum disorders (FASD). In the R61 Phase we
will research, create, design, and pilot test new protocols for: 1) interviewing mothers (with
biomarker validation) to determine daily/weekly prenatal alcohol exposure across pregnancy and
postpartum alcohol use during breastfeeding; 2) determining maternal experience with stress,
trauma, and mental health status during pregnancy and their contribution to FASD diagnostic
traits; 3) interviewing fathers regarding paternal traits that contribute to risk for FASD; and 4)
establishing a comprehensive, summary FASD risk score from the above innovations when
combined with multiple other empirically-established variables of risk. The R33 Phase will draw
on our existing clinical epidemiology infrastructure, the experience of our multi-disciplinary
team, and the participants in existing longitudinal cohorts to assess the efficacy of multivariate
FASD risk assessment in two applications: A) a multivariate assessment of FASD risk via a
prospective study of 200 women recruited from prenatal clinics, and their offspring who will be
assessed postpartum for FASD traits; and B) and linking retrospectively-collected multivariate
FASD risk information with data from two existing cohorts of mothers and their children who
have been previously assessed for FASD and the severity of their physical, neurodevelopmental,
and behavioral traits.
National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism
CFDA Code
273
DUNS Number
608195277
UEI
D3LHU66KBLD5
Project Start Date
01-April-2023
Project End Date
31-March-2026
Budget Start Date
01-April-2024
Budget End Date
31-March-2026
Project Funding Information for 2024
Total Funding
$228,138
Direct Costs
$159,044
Indirect Costs
$69,094
Year
Funding IC
FY Total Cost by IC
2024
National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism
$228,138
Year
Funding IC
FY Total Cost by IC
Sub Projects
No Sub Projects information available for 5R61AA030066-02
Publications
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Outcomes
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Clinical Studies
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History
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