Feasibility of Identifying a Chinese Study Population and Eligible Pediatric Cancer Cases, and Linking the Two Groups to Assess the Role of Periconceptional Folic Acid Supplements in Risk of Pediatric Cancer.

December 13, 2019 updated by: National Cancer Institute (NCI)

Feasibility of Identifying the Chinese Community Intervention Program (CIP) Population and Eligible Incident Pediatric Cancer Cases, and Linking the Cases to the Population to Assess the Role of Periconceptional Folic Acid Supplements in Risk of Pediatric Cancer (Pilot #N3)

Background:

- Pregnant women are encouraged to take the vitamin folate. It helps prevent some birth defects. Children of mothers who take it also have less risk of some cancers. Between 1993 and 1995, some women in China took the vitamin daily before and during early pregnancy. Another group did not. This study will follow up on children born to both sets of women. (The children were born between 1994 and 1996.) Researchers will use these data to study the link between folate and cancer in infants and children.

Objective:

- To see if folate may reduce childhood cancer if women take it every day before and during early pregnancy.

Eligibility:

- Mothers who took part in a Chinese folic acid study between 1993 and 1995 and their offspring.

Design:

  • Mothers of children in the study will sign a consent form. The form lets the researchers review the child s medical history. They may also review data about their cancer diagnosis. The children will also sign a form.

Study Overview

Detailed Description

Few risk factors have been consistently linked with pediatric cancer. During the past 15 years, small casecontrol epidemiologic studies in Caucasian populations have reported reduced risks of pediatric leukemia and brain tumors in offspring of mothers treated with folic acid and iron supplements in the prenatal and periconceptional period.

We describe a feasibility study to evaluate the potential for prospective assessment of periconceptional and prenatal folic acid supplements and other postulated risk factors in risk of pediatric leukemia and other pediatric cancers. If the feasibility study is successful, we propose to carry out a prospective record linkage Children and Families Cohort Study (CFCS) (N=243,779) to compare risk of pediatric leukemia, brain tumors and other pediatric cancers in offspring of Chinese mothers who took vs did not take periconceptional folic acid supplements during 1993-1995 in a community-based intervention trial that assessed the effects on occurrence of neural tube defects. The original investigators last followed up the population in 2000-2001 The Chinese CDC, the U.S. CDC, and NCI collaborators carried out small pilot studies (N=560 families) during 2011-2013 demonstrating that CFCS families can be successfully identified and traced, that mothers and offspring would participate in single and in multi-day interviews, and that referral and community hospitals (N=8) could locate and abstract medical records of potentially eligible pediatric cancer cases diagnosed during 1994 to the present.

The proposed feasibility study involves three components. The first component will test success in re-creating the original CFCS offspring list in the 21 counties in three provinces. Data collected in the original 1993-1995 study and 2000-2001 follow-up to be used in recreating the list includes the original study ID number, sex, birth dates of offspring, mothers and fathers, place of birth (village, township, and hospital), residence at birth, and other identifying information; names of subjects and family members are not available on the original study lists. This component will be undertaken in collaboration with county- and provincial-level maternal and child health organizations that will coordinate with public health bureaus, family planning, and public security agencies. The goal of this component is to re-identify all of the CFCS offspring in 5 counties in Hebei Province and in 9 counties in Jiangsu and Zhejiang Provinces, and in samples of 500 randomly selected CFCS offspring in each of 7 counties in Jiangsu and Zhejiang Provinces.

The second component will identify all hospitals where children from the 21-county study population would have been diagnosed or treated for pediatric cancer during 1994 to the present. An expanded sample of these hospitals (N=10 beyond the 8 hospitals included in our recent pilot study) will be contacted and asked to collaborate in the proposed study. Tasks will include identification and abstraction of medical records of pediatric cancer cases occurring in children who are potentially CFCS offspring (born during 1994-1996 in any of the 21 CFCS study counties). Mothers of the pediatric cancer patients will be interviewed and asked to provide identifying information to ascertain if the offspring were in the CFCS population, and to provide consent (together with their offspring s assent) for the collaborators to have access to the medical record abstract data and to match the offspring with the CFCS population list. The investigators will then attempt to match the potentially eligible pediatric cancer cases with the CFCS list in the 5 counties in Hebei Province and the 9 counties in Jiangsu and Zhejiang Provinces.

The third component will identifying deaths among offspring to ascertain those that definitely, probably or possibly might be due to childhood cancer. For deaths among CFCS offspring identified during the 2000-2001cohort follow-up by the original study team, cause of death will be ascertained from death certificates if available or from medical records or interview of primary care physicians if death certificates are not available. For deaths among offspring who died after 2000-2001,review of death certificates among children born during 1994-1996 in the 21 counties will be undertaken. Identifying information will be sought from the death certificate to match the deceased child to the CFCS. If the identifying information is insufficient for a match, for those deaths definitely, probably or possibly due to childhood cancer, the mother of the deceased child will be traced and interviewed to obtain additional identifying information, permission to review medical records for hospitalizations near to the time of death, and contact information for the child s primary care doctor. For those children who died after 2000-2001and are determined to definitely or probably be members of the CFCS, a provisional determination will be made if the deceased offspring definitely, probably, possibly or did not have a diagnosis of childhood cancer. The provisional diagnoses will be reviewed by the expert pediatric hematologists/oncologists/neurosurgeons for a final determination and assessment of level of certainty.

Study Type

Observational

Participation Criteria

Researchers look for people who fit a certain description, called eligibility criteria. Some examples of these criteria are a person's general health condition or prior treatments.

Eligibility Criteria

Ages Eligible for Study

17 years to 20 years (ADULT, CHILD)

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

No

Genders Eligible for Study

All

Description

  • INCLUSION CRITERIA:

Eligibility and inclusion criteria are as follows for each specific aim:

Specific Aim #1. Families with a child born 1994-96 in the 21 CFCS counties and whose family members (mother, offspring, and child) match the identifying characteristics listed in Table 2.

Specific Aim #2. Children born during 1994-96 in the 21 CFCS counties who were diagnosed with incident pediatric cancers during 1994 to the present

Specific Aim #3. Children born during 1994-96 in the 21 counties and members of the CFCS population who were determined to have died during the 2000-2001 follow-up. Those eligible for this specific aim among children not known to have died based on the 2000-2001 follow-up will include children born during 1994-1996 in the 21 counties who are found to have died after 2000-2001 based on search of death certificates at the county- and provincial-level CDCs. Efforts will be undertaken to determine if children who died after 2000-2001 and are potentially eligible (born 1994-1996 in one of the 21 CFCS counties) were definitely or probably offspring members of the CFCS through review of death certificates and interview of mothers of the deceased children. For these offspring, review and abstracting of medical records for hospitalizations, or, if not available, interviews with primary care doctors of the children will be undertaken to determine if the individual definitely, probably, possibly or did not have a diagnosis of childhood cancer.

Study Plan

This section provides details of the study plan, including how the study is designed and what the study is measuring.

How is the study designed?

Design Details

What is the study measuring?

Primary Outcome Measures

Outcome Measure
Measure Description
Time Frame
Pediatric cancer
Time Frame: 1994-2015
outcomes include pediatric leukemia, pediatric brain tumors and other pediatric cancers
1994-2015

Collaborators and Investigators

This is where you will find people and organizations involved with this study.

Study record dates

These dates track the progress of study record and summary results submissions to ClinicalTrials.gov. Study records and reported results are reviewed by the National Library of Medicine (NLM) to make sure they meet specific quality control standards before being posted on the public website.

Study Major Dates

Study Start

March 27, 2014

Primary Completion (Actual)

February 23, 2018

Study Completion (Actual)

October 9, 2018

Study Registration Dates

First Submitted

June 7, 2014

First Submitted That Met QC Criteria

June 7, 2014

First Posted (Estimate)

June 11, 2014

Study Record Updates

Last Update Posted (Actual)

December 16, 2019

Last Update Submitted That Met QC Criteria

December 13, 2019

Last Verified

October 9, 2018

More Information

This information was retrieved directly from the website clinicaltrials.gov without any changes. If you have any requests to change, remove or update your study details, please contact register@clinicaltrials.gov. As soon as a change is implemented on clinicaltrials.gov, this will be updated automatically on our website as well.

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