Planning, implementing, and running a multicentre preterm birth study with biobank resources in Brazil : the preterm SAMBA study
Autor(a) principal: | |
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Data de Publicação: | 2015 |
Outros Autores: | , , , , , , , , , , , , |
Tipo de documento: | Artigo |
Idioma: | eng |
Título da fonte: | Repositório Institucional da UFRGS |
Texto Completo: | http://hdl.handle.net/10183/195598 |
Resumo: | Background. Our aim was to describe the steps in planning, implementing, and running a multicentre cohort study of maternal and perinatal health using a high-quality biobank comprised of maternal serum, plasma, and hair samples collected from five sites in Brazil.The Preterm SAMBA study, conducted by the Brazilian Network for Studies on Reproductive and Perinatal Health, was an innovative approach used to identify women at higher risk for preterm birth. It is also of great importance in the study of other maternal and perinatal complications in the context of Brazil, which is a middle-income country. Methods. We described phases of planning, implementing, and running the Preterm SAMBA study, a multicentre Brazilian cohort study of low-risk nulliparous pregnant women, to validate a set of metabolite biomarkers for preterm birth identified in an external cohort. Procedures and strategies used to plan, implement, and maintain this multicentre preterm birth study are described in detail. Barriers and experience cited in the current narrative are not usually discussed in the scientific literature or published study protocols. Results. Several barriers and strategies were identified in different phases of the Preterm SAMBA study at different levels of the study framework (steering committee; coordinating and local centres). Strategies implemented and resources used in the study are a legacy of the Brazilian Network, aimed at training collaborators in such complex settings. Conclusion. The Brazilian Network for Studies on Reproductive and Perinatal Health has gained some experience in conducting a multicentre cohort study using a resourceful biobank which may be helpful to other research groups and maternal/perinatal health networks that plan on employing a similar approach to a similar background. |
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Souza, Renato TeixeiraCecatti, Jose GuilhermeNascimento, Maria Laura Costa doNovais, Jussara de Souza MayrinkPacagnella, Rodolfo de CarvalhoPassini Júnior, RenatoFranchini, Kleber GomesFeitosa, Francisco Edson de LucenaCalderon, Iracema de Mattos ParanhosRocha Filho, Edilberto Alves Pereira daLeite, Debora Farias BatistaVettorazzi, JaneteKenny, Louise C.Baker, Philip Newton2019-06-06T02:35:50Z20152314-6141http://hdl.handle.net/10183/195598001093155Background. Our aim was to describe the steps in planning, implementing, and running a multicentre cohort study of maternal and perinatal health using a high-quality biobank comprised of maternal serum, plasma, and hair samples collected from five sites in Brazil.The Preterm SAMBA study, conducted by the Brazilian Network for Studies on Reproductive and Perinatal Health, was an innovative approach used to identify women at higher risk for preterm birth. It is also of great importance in the study of other maternal and perinatal complications in the context of Brazil, which is a middle-income country. Methods. We described phases of planning, implementing, and running the Preterm SAMBA study, a multicentre Brazilian cohort study of low-risk nulliparous pregnant women, to validate a set of metabolite biomarkers for preterm birth identified in an external cohort. Procedures and strategies used to plan, implement, and maintain this multicentre preterm birth study are described in detail. Barriers and experience cited in the current narrative are not usually discussed in the scientific literature or published study protocols. Results. Several barriers and strategies were identified in different phases of the Preterm SAMBA study at different levels of the study framework (steering committee; coordinating and local centres). Strategies implemented and resources used in the study are a legacy of the Brazilian Network, aimed at training collaborators in such complex settings. Conclusion. The Brazilian Network for Studies on Reproductive and Perinatal Health has gained some experience in conducting a multicentre cohort study using a resourceful biobank which may be helpful to other research groups and maternal/perinatal health networks that plan on employing a similar approach to a similar background.application/pdfengBioMed research international. New York. vol. 2019, 5476350, 8 f.Nascimento prematuroAcademias e institutosPlanning, implementing, and running a multicentre preterm birth study with biobank resources in Brazil : the preterm SAMBA studyEstrangeiroinfo:eu-repo/semantics/articleinfo:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersioninfo:eu-repo/semantics/openAccessreponame:Repositório Institucional da UFRGSinstname:Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul (UFRGS)instacron:UFRGSTEXT001093155.pdf.txt001093155.pdf.txtExtracted Texttext/plain46519http://www.lume.ufrgs.br/bitstream/10183/195598/2/001093155.pdf.txtfe76b25dc2788bf4afaac4b4bf2771d3MD52ORIGINAL001093155.pdfTexto completo (inglês)application/pdf1753493http://www.lume.ufrgs.br/bitstream/10183/195598/1/001093155.pdfb54d1bd64535f3ce2401f99d6e97ddfcMD5110183/1955982019-06-07 02:35:47.45917oai:www.lume.ufrgs.br:10183/195598Repositório de PublicaçõesPUBhttps://lume.ufrgs.br/oai/requestopendoar:2019-06-07T05:35:47Repositório Institucional da UFRGS - Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul (UFRGS)false |
dc.title.pt_BR.fl_str_mv |
Planning, implementing, and running a multicentre preterm birth study with biobank resources in Brazil : the preterm SAMBA study |
title |
Planning, implementing, and running a multicentre preterm birth study with biobank resources in Brazil : the preterm SAMBA study |
spellingShingle |
Planning, implementing, and running a multicentre preterm birth study with biobank resources in Brazil : the preterm SAMBA study Souza, Renato Teixeira Nascimento prematuro Academias e institutos |
title_short |
Planning, implementing, and running a multicentre preterm birth study with biobank resources in Brazil : the preterm SAMBA study |
title_full |
Planning, implementing, and running a multicentre preterm birth study with biobank resources in Brazil : the preterm SAMBA study |
title_fullStr |
Planning, implementing, and running a multicentre preterm birth study with biobank resources in Brazil : the preterm SAMBA study |
title_full_unstemmed |
Planning, implementing, and running a multicentre preterm birth study with biobank resources in Brazil : the preterm SAMBA study |
title_sort |
Planning, implementing, and running a multicentre preterm birth study with biobank resources in Brazil : the preterm SAMBA study |
author |
Souza, Renato Teixeira |
author_facet |
Souza, Renato Teixeira Cecatti, Jose Guilherme Nascimento, Maria Laura Costa do Novais, Jussara de Souza Mayrink Pacagnella, Rodolfo de Carvalho Passini Júnior, Renato Franchini, Kleber Gomes Feitosa, Francisco Edson de Lucena Calderon, Iracema de Mattos Paranhos Rocha Filho, Edilberto Alves Pereira da Leite, Debora Farias Batista Vettorazzi, Janete Kenny, Louise C. Baker, Philip Newton |
author_role |
author |
author2 |
Cecatti, Jose Guilherme Nascimento, Maria Laura Costa do Novais, Jussara de Souza Mayrink Pacagnella, Rodolfo de Carvalho Passini Júnior, Renato Franchini, Kleber Gomes Feitosa, Francisco Edson de Lucena Calderon, Iracema de Mattos Paranhos Rocha Filho, Edilberto Alves Pereira da Leite, Debora Farias Batista Vettorazzi, Janete Kenny, Louise C. Baker, Philip Newton |
author2_role |
author author author author author author author author author author author author author |
dc.contributor.author.fl_str_mv |
Souza, Renato Teixeira Cecatti, Jose Guilherme Nascimento, Maria Laura Costa do Novais, Jussara de Souza Mayrink Pacagnella, Rodolfo de Carvalho Passini Júnior, Renato Franchini, Kleber Gomes Feitosa, Francisco Edson de Lucena Calderon, Iracema de Mattos Paranhos Rocha Filho, Edilberto Alves Pereira da Leite, Debora Farias Batista Vettorazzi, Janete Kenny, Louise C. Baker, Philip Newton |
dc.subject.por.fl_str_mv |
Nascimento prematuro Academias e institutos |
topic |
Nascimento prematuro Academias e institutos |
description |
Background. Our aim was to describe the steps in planning, implementing, and running a multicentre cohort study of maternal and perinatal health using a high-quality biobank comprised of maternal serum, plasma, and hair samples collected from five sites in Brazil.The Preterm SAMBA study, conducted by the Brazilian Network for Studies on Reproductive and Perinatal Health, was an innovative approach used to identify women at higher risk for preterm birth. It is also of great importance in the study of other maternal and perinatal complications in the context of Brazil, which is a middle-income country. Methods. We described phases of planning, implementing, and running the Preterm SAMBA study, a multicentre Brazilian cohort study of low-risk nulliparous pregnant women, to validate a set of metabolite biomarkers for preterm birth identified in an external cohort. Procedures and strategies used to plan, implement, and maintain this multicentre preterm birth study are described in detail. Barriers and experience cited in the current narrative are not usually discussed in the scientific literature or published study protocols. Results. Several barriers and strategies were identified in different phases of the Preterm SAMBA study at different levels of the study framework (steering committee; coordinating and local centres). Strategies implemented and resources used in the study are a legacy of the Brazilian Network, aimed at training collaborators in such complex settings. Conclusion. The Brazilian Network for Studies on Reproductive and Perinatal Health has gained some experience in conducting a multicentre cohort study using a resourceful biobank which may be helpful to other research groups and maternal/perinatal health networks that plan on employing a similar approach to a similar background. |
publishDate |
2015 |
dc.date.issued.fl_str_mv |
2015 |
dc.date.accessioned.fl_str_mv |
2019-06-06T02:35:50Z |
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BioMed research international. New York. vol. 2019, 5476350, 8 f. |
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