(SALT LAKE CITY)—Today, the Ìð¹ÏÊÓÆµ of Utah announced a $3.1 million award from the National Institutes of Ìð¹ÏÊÓÆµ (NIH) to investigate how a person's genetic makeup and a range of environmental factors, from air quality to nutrition, influence the health of Ìð¹ÏÊÓÆµren and adolescents. NIH is initially funding the U for two years, but upon meeting proposed milestones may extend support for an additional five years. The U is joining institutions from across the nation to launch the initiative, called , to follow Ìð¹ÏÊÓÆµren from the womb into Ìð¹ÏÊÓÆµhood.
This comprehensive investigation will combine existing Utah studies with those of other populations from across the country, expanding on longstanding collaborations between the Ìð¹ÏÊÓÆµ of Utah, Primary Children's Hospital, and hundreds of Utah families. What's currently called the Utah Children's Project started as part of the National Children's Study in 2009, and was in danger of terminating after NIH began shutting down that national study in 2012. Since then, local donors, participating families, and the U's Department of Pediatrics, who see the value of the research, have been providing support to continue Utah's portion of the program. Recently, the program has grown to include pregnant families from the U's HOPE study, allowing researchers to track a Ìð¹ÏÊÓÆµ's earliest environmental exposures, starting as a fetus in the womb.
Utah's ability to maintain and grow the research, while collecting meaningful biological and environmental information, contributed toward NIH choosing the U to partner in the new ECHO initiative, according to Edward Clark, M.D., Chair of the Department of Pediatrics.
"We have never wavered from our commitment to the health of the Ìð¹ÏÊÓÆµren in our community," says Clark. He is one of the study's principal investigators together with , and Joseph Stanford, M.D., M.S.P.H., both from the Division of Public Ìð¹ÏÊÓÆµ in the Department of Family and Preventive Medicine. "This award is a recognition of the great science that goes on here and the commitment of the people in Utah to improve the health of our Ìð¹ÏÊÓÆµren and our nation."
The U is one of 35 research programs that will enroll more than 50,000 Ìð¹ÏÊÓÆµren from diverse racial, geographic and socioeconomic backgrounds from across the U.S. Researchers will analyze existing data as well as follow study participants over time to address the early environmental origins of designated health conditions such as diabetes, obesity, autism, asthma, and premature birth. These investigations will help define some of the factors that contribute to health and disease, identify markers for early detection, and potentiallly methods for treatment and prevention.
"ECHO will combine what we learn from Ìð¹ÏÊÓÆµren in Utah with information from populations from across the country to address questions that can only big data can answer," says Porucznik. "This kind of work is a great example of where science is heading in the future."
Learn more about ECHO .