Login / Signup

Building a growing genomic data repository for maternal and fetal health through the PING Consortium.

Clara M AbdelmalekShriya SinghBlain FasilAllison R HorvathSarah B MulkeyCarlos CuréMaribel CamposDenise P CavalcantiVan T TongMarcela MercadoMarcela DazaMónica Marcela BenavidesJacqueline AcostaSuzanne M GilboaDiana ValenciaChristina L SanckenSuzanne M NewtonDeolinda M F ScalabrinMarisa Márcia Mussi-PinhataZilton Farias Meira de VasconcelosNahida ChakhtouraJack MoyeElizabeth J LeslieDorothy I BulasGilbert VezinaFernanda J P MarquesMarcio LeyserMiguel Del CampoEric VilainRoberta L DeBiasiTongguang WangAvindra NathTarik F HaydarMaximilian MuenkeTamer A MansourAdre J du PlessisJeffrey C MurrayJosé F CorderoYoussef A Kousa
Published in: medRxiv : the preprint server for health sciences (2024)
Our goal in bringing together these sets of patient data was to test the hypothesis that personal and populational genetic differences affect the severity of brain injury after a prenatal viral infection and modify neurodevelopmental outcomes. We have enrolled 4,102 mothers and 3,877 infants with 3,063 biological samples and clinical data covering over 80 phenotypic fields and 5,000 variables. There were several notable challenges in bringing together cohorts enrolled in different studies, including variability in the timepoints evaluated and the collected clinical data and biospecimens. Thus far, we have performed whole exome sequencing on 1,226 participants. Here, we present the Consortium's formation and the overarching study design. We began our investigation with prenatal Zika infection with the goal of applying this knowledge to other prenatal infections and exposures that can affect brain development.
Keyphrases