At a glance
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Epidemiologic Study on Small-for-gestational-age Children (EPIPAGE2 Cohort Study) - Follow up at Five and a Half Years
In Brief
An observational study evaluating Medical and neuropsychological assessments for Very Preterm Birth. Completed, enrolled 3,404 participants across 98 sites in 4 countries.
Detailed Summary
Epipage 2 (epidemiologic study on small-for-gestational-age children) is a nationwide study implemented to improve our knowledge of the outcome of preterm children in France. This study was launched on March 28, 2011 and includes three groups of preterm children, all born before 35 weeks: extremely preterm infants (born between 22 and 26 completed weeks of gestation), very preterm children (born between 27 and 31 completed weeks) and moderately preterm children (born between 32 and 34 completed weeks). These children are being studied from their birth up to the age of 12 years. At birth, data on maternal and infants' characteristics were collected from medical records. At one and two years, questionnaires sent to families and to physicians (at two years only) allowed to collect data about the children's life and health. At five and a half years, medical and psychological assessments are specifically implemented for the study in order to evaluate motor and cognitive disorders in this population.
Study Details
Timeline
Interventions
Assessment of health status and development will be performed in specific centers at 5 and a half years. This check-up includes a complete medical examination to look for visual, hearing, motor impairment and health problems, and psychological tests using standardized tools (WPPSI IV ((Wechsler Preschool and Primary Scales Intelligence)) and NEPSY 2 tests) to assess cognitive development of very preterm children. A parental questionnaire will be fulfilled to investigate family's social conditions, maternal health, autism spectrum disorders (Social Communication Questionnaire), the child's quality of life and behavioral development (Strengths and Difficulties Questionnaire).