Prospective pregnancy study designs for assessing reproductive and developmental toxicants

Environmental health perspectives, 112(1), 79-86

DOI 10.1289/ehp.6262 PMID 14698935 Source

Abstract

The determinants of successful human reproduction and development may act as early as periconceptionally, underscoring the need to capture exposures during these critical windows when assessing potential toxicants. To identify such toxicants, couples must be studied longitudinally prior to conception without regard to a couple's ability to ascertain a clinically recognized pregnancy. We examined the utility and feasibility of prospective pregnancy study designs by conducting a systematic review of the literature to summarize relevant information regarding the planning, implementation, and success of previously published prospective pregnancy studies. Information concerning design elements and participation was abstracted from 15 eligible studies (from a total of 20 identified studies) using a standardized form. The primary author of each study was contacted to review our summary of their work and obtain missing information. Our findings confirm the ability to recruit women/couples from diverse populations using a variety of recruitment strategies. Among the studies we reviewed, 4-97% of eligible individuals were successfully contacted, with enrollment rates ranging from 42 to 100%. Length of follow-up varied from 3 to 12 months. A high percentage of women provided urine (57-98%) and blood (86-91%) specimens and most male partners (94-100%) provided semen samples. These data support the feasibility of this design.

Topics

prospective pregnancy study design, periconceptional exposure assessment, preconception cohort recruitment, fertility research methodology, time to pregnancy cohort, reproductive toxicant study, enrollment strategies pregnancy studies, biospecimen collection pregnancy research, early pregnancy loss capture, couples trying to conceive recruitment, semen sample collection rates, longitudinal pregnancy study feasibility

Cite this article

Buck, G. M., Lynch, C. D., Sweeney, A. M., Schieve, L. A., Rockett, J. C., Selevan, S. G., Schrader, S. M., & Stanford, J. B. (2003). Prospective pregnancy study designs for assessing reproductive and developmental toxicants. *Environmental health perspectives*, *112*(1), 79-86. https://doi.org/10.1289/ehp.6262

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