key: cord-0985042-ts1hzp3u authors: Trasande, Leonardo; Landrigan, Philip J. title: The National Children’s Study: A Critical National Investment date: 2004-10-03 journal: Environ Health Perspect DOI: nan sha: 5b3e895eea9402eca728dbe11b00431d4bacbc7f doc_id: 985042 cord_uid: ts1hzp3u nan • Neurodevelopmental disorders-including learning disabilities, dyslexia, mental retardation, attention deficit disorder, and autism-are highly prevalent and affect 5-10% of the 4 million babies born in the United States each year (Bertrand et al. 2001; CDC 2004a CDC , 2004b LeFever et al. 1999; Safer et al. 1996; Zito et al. 2000) . • Prevalence of childhood obesity has trebled (Galvez et al. 2003 ). • Incidence rates of chronic neurodegenerative diseases of late life such as Parkinson disease and dementia and of certain cancers have increased markedly, raising the possibility of early-life antecedents (Cory-Slechta et al., unpublished data). Although much remains to be learned about the causes of these trends, evidence is accumulating that environmental factors make important contributions. • Airborne fine particulates have been shown to cause asthma and to trigger asthmatic atttacks (Salam et al. 2004 ). • Ozone, oxides of nitrogen, environmental tobacco smoke, and indoor air pollutants all are now recognized triggers for asthma (Suh et al. 2000; Wallace et al. 2003 ). • Childhood cancer has long been linked to ionizing radiation. More recently, benzene, 1,3-butadiene, and pesticides have been etiologically associated (Daniels et al. 2001; Lee et al. 2004 ). • Neurobehavioral impairment has been observed following exposure of the fetal brain to even low levels of lead (Baghurst et al. 1987; Canfield et al. 2003; Dietrich et al. 1987; Lanphear et al. 2000; Opler et al. 2004; Wasserman et al. 2000) , methyl mercury (Grandjean et al. 1997 Kjellstrom et al. 1986 Kjellstrom et al. , 1989 Murata et al. 2004; National Research Council 2000) , pesticides (Berkowitz et al. 2004; Perera et al. 2003) , polychlorinated biphenyls (Jacobson and Jacobson 1996) , and ethanol (Lupton et al. 2004) . A recent National Academy of Sciences study (2000) suggests that at least 28% of developmental disabilities in children are caused by environmental factors acting alone or in concert with genetic susceptibility. Until now, progress in elucidating the role of the environment in chronic childhood disease has been slow and incremental. Nearly all studies have examined relatively small populations of children; have considered only one chemical toxicant at a time; have had little statistical power to examine interactions among chemical, social, and behavioral factors in the environment; have had limited ability to examine gene-environment interactions (Olden 2004) ; and have suffered from brief duration of follow-up. Also, many previous studies have been retrospective in design and thus have been forced to estimate past exposures from limited and sometimes biased historical data. To overcome these difficulties, the President's Task Force on Environmental Health and Safety Risks to Children recommended in 1998 (U.S. Department of Health and Human Services 2004) that a large prospective epidemiologic study of American children be undertaken. In response, the U.S. Congress through the Children's Health Act of 2000 authorized the National Institute of Child Health and Human Development (NICHD) "to conduct a national longitudinal study of environmental influences (including physical, chemical, biological and psychosocial) on children's health and development" (Children's Health Act 2000). The National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences (NIEHS), the CDC, and the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) join the NICHD in planning and conducting this study. Key features of this far-reaching study-now termed the National Children's Study (NCS)-are that it will follow a representative sample of 100,000 American children from early pregnancy through age 21; a subset maybe recruited before conception. Exposure histories and biologic samples will be obtained during pregnancy and from children as they grow, obviating the need for retrospective assessments of exposures. The large sample size will facilitate simultaneous examination of the effects of multiple chemical exposures, of interactions among them, and of interactions among biologic, chemical, behavioral, and social factors. Each child will be screened genetically, thus permitting study of gene-environment interactions. Follow-up will extend over decades. For the past four years, working groups convened by NICHD have been developing the NCS: formulating core hypotheses, delineating research protocols, and planning logistics. The study is now ready for the field. Previous major prospective epidemiologic studies have yielded invaluable gains in knowledge of disease causation and have provided critical tools for prevention and treatment. The Framingham Heart Study (Framingham, MA), for example, was established in 1948 at a time when heart disease and stroke were epidemic in the United States. The goal was to identify preventable risk factors. Within a few years, data from Framingham identified cigarette smoking (Dawber 1960) and elevated cholesterol and hypertension as preventable causes of cardiovascular disease (CVD) (Kannel et al. 1961 (Kannel et al. , 1978 ; later analyses elucidated the role of elevated triglycerides, sedentary lifestyle, and diabetes. This information provided the blueprint for the major reductions in incidence of CVD that we have achieved in the United States over the past four decades (CDC 1999) . We anticipate that the NCS will yield equally enormous societal benefits. Six of the chronic diseases that the study plans to examine -obesity, injury, asthma, diabetes, schizophrenia, and autism-cost America $642 billion per year (Bromet and Fennig 1999; CDC 2004a CDC , 2004b CDC , 2004c CDC , 2004d -Allsop et al. 2002) . If the NCS were to produce a reduction of only 1% in incidence of these diseases, the annual savings would amount to $6.4 billion, far more than the $2.7 billion price tag of the study over 25 years. Despite the enormous potential of the NCS, its funding is in critical jeopardy. In each of the past 4 years, the annual budget has been $12 million, a sum provided by contributions from the NICHD, the NIEHS, the CDC, and the U.S. EPA. But now to move the study forward, there is need in 2005 to establish a data-coordinating center, a repository for secure storage of biologic samples, and a series of regionally distributed vanguard recruitment sites. For these tasks, NICHD needs $15 million in new dollars above their regular budget. Without at least $27 million in federal funding in 2005, NICHD will likely be forced to cancel or at least postpone the study. 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