Study of Women's Health Across the Nation-Endocrine Lab
全国女性健康研究-内分泌实验室
基本信息
- 批准号:7252412
- 负责人:
- 金额:$ 63.22万
- 依托单位:
- 依托单位国家:美国
- 项目类别:
- 财政年份:1994
- 资助国家:美国
- 起止时间:1994-09-30 至 2009-04-30
- 项目状态:已结题
- 来源:
- 关键词:AddressAffectAfrican AmericanAgeAgingAmericanAnabolismAndrogensAreaBiologicalBiological AssayBiological MarkersBiologyBloodBlood VesselsBody CompositionBody SizeBone DensityCardiovascular DiseasesCardiovascular systemCaucasiansCaucasoid RaceCharacteristicsChinese PeopleChronic DiseaseClassClinic VisitsClinicalCognitiveCommunitiesComplementary and alternative medicineDEXADNADailyDataData CollectionDementiaDiseaseEnd PointEndocrineEnrollmentEnsureEnvironmentEstrogensEthnic OriginEthnic groupEventFoundationsFundingFutureGoalsGrantHealthHemorrhageHispanicsHormonalHormonesImpaired cognitionIncidenceInstitutesJapanese PopulationLaboratoriesLeadershipLifeLife StyleLinkLongitudinal StudiesMailsMaintenanceMeasurementMenopauseMenstruationMoodsNational Institute of Nursing ResearchOperative Surgical ProceduresOutcomeOvarianParticipantPathologic ProcessesPatternPerimenopausePersonal SatisfactionPhase TransitionPhysiologicalPhysiological ProcessesPlasmaPostmenopausePremenopausePsychosocial FactorRandomizedRangeRecording of previous eventsRelative (related person)ResearchResearch DesignResearch PersonnelRiskRisk FactorsRoleSamplingScheduleScienceSex FunctioningSmokerSpecimenStagingStrokeSubgroupSurvival AnalysisSymptomsSystemTechnologyThromboembolismTimeU-Series Cooperative AgreementsUrineVariantVasomotorVisitWomanWomen&aposs Healthage relatedagedbasebonebone losscardiovascular disorder riskcardiovascular risk factorcognitive functioncohortcostcritical developmental periodexperiencefollow-uphormone therapyimmortalized cellinsightmalignant breast neoplasmmiddle agemorphometrypsychologicpsychosocialracial/ethnic differencerepositoryreproductive hormoneresponsesocioeconomicsspine bone structure
项目摘要
DESCRIPTION (provided by applicant): The Study of Women's Health Across the Nation (SWAN) is a multicenter, multiethnic, community based longitudinal study designed to characterize the biological, symptomatic and psychosocial changes that occur during the menopausal transition and the effects of these changes on women's health during and after the transition. Current and prior funding (SWAN I and II) has supported seven years of follow-up, at the end of which 60%of observable transitions to postmenopause will have occured. This competitve renewal application (SWAN III) requests funding to complete 10 cohort follow-up visits. This will allow us to capture 91% of observable transitions to postmenopause and obtain a more representative sample. The additional data will a focus on the late perimenopausal and early postmenopausal periods that have not been well studied. As women reach the end of early postmenopause (two years following the final menstrual period), we will shift from an annual to a bi-annual follow-up schedule with mail and telphone contact in the alternating years. This will set the stage for cost-effective and less intensive follow-up beyond SWAN III. We will continue our current observations and undertake new science in each of the four scientific project areas (ovarian aging; symptoms, risk factors, functioning and aging; cardiovascular risk factors; and determinants and outcomes of bone mass). New science includes measurement of vascular stiffness to assess early cardiovascular disease, vertebral morphometry using newly developed DEXA technology bone and body composition and circulating androgens as markers androgen biosynthesis. The latter will use an assay system developed by SWAN investigators. In addition, we will focus on linking the menopause and midlife experiences to age-related outcomes and chronic diseases, including physical and cognitive function. The additional follow-up will contribute to and expand the SWAN biological specimen repository (annual blood and urine samples as well as DNA and immortalized cells), a separately funded component that provides opportunities to address future hypotheses about health, disease, and aging. SWAN III will allow us to bring to fruition many of the original goals of SWAN. By building upon the rich foundation developed during SWAN I and II, and ultimately linking these data to age-related health outcomes, we will achieve unparalleled new insights into the role of the menopause on the health of American women.
描述(由申请人提供):全国妇女健康研究(SWAN)是一项多中心、多种族、基于社区的纵向研究,旨在描述绝经过渡期间发生的生物学、症状和心理社会变化,以及这些变化对绝经过渡期间和之后妇女健康的影响。目前和以前的资金(SWAN I和II)支持了7年的随访,在随访结束时,60%的可观察到的绝经后过渡将发生。 该竞争性更新申请(SWAN III)要求资助完成10次队列随访访视。这将使我们能够捕获91%的可观察到的绝经后过渡,并获得更具代表性的样本。额外的数据将集中在晚期围绝经期和早期绝经后时期,还没有得到很好的研究。当女性达到早期绝经期结束时(末次月经后两年),我们将从每年一次的随访时间表转变为每两年一次的随访时间表,在交替的几年中通过邮件和电话联系。这将为在SWAN III之后采取具有成本效益和不太密集的后续行动奠定基础。我们将继续我们目前的观察,并在四个科学项目领域(卵巢衰老;症状,风险因素,功能和衰老;心血管风险因素;骨量的决定因素和结果)中的每一个领域开展新的科学研究。新科学包括测量血管硬度以评估早期心血管疾病,使用新开发的DEXA技术进行椎骨形态测量骨和身体成分以及循环雄激素作为雄激素生物合成的标志物。后者将使用SWAN研究人员开发的分析系统。此外,我们将专注于将更年期和中年经历与年龄相关的结果和慢性疾病联系起来,包括身体和认知功能。额外的后续行动将有助于扩大SWAN生物标本库(每年的血液和尿液样本以及DNA和永生细胞),这是一个单独资助的组成部分,为解决未来关于健康,疾病和衰老的假设提供了机会。SWAN III将使我们能够实现SWAN的许多原始目标。通过建立在SWAN I和II期间开发的丰富基础上,并最终将这些数据与年龄相关的健康结果联系起来,我们将对更年期对美国女性健康的作用获得前所未有的新见解。
项目成果
期刊论文数量(0)
专著数量(0)
科研奖励数量(0)
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DANIEL S MCCONNELL其他文献
DANIEL S MCCONNELL的其他文献
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{{ truncateString('DANIEL S MCCONNELL', 18)}}的其他基金
Study of Women's Health Across the Nation-Endocrine Lab
全国女性健康研究-内分泌实验室
- 批准号:
7071750 - 财政年份:1994
- 资助金额:
$ 63.22万 - 项目类别:
WOMENS HEALTH ACROSS THE NATION--ENDOCRINE LAB
全国女性健康--内分泌实验室
- 批准号:
6475597 - 财政年份:1994
- 资助金额:
$ 63.22万 - 项目类别:
Study of Women's Health Across the Nation-Endocrine Lab
全国女性健康研究-内分泌实验室
- 批准号:
6641062 - 财政年份:1994
- 资助金额:
$ 63.22万 - 项目类别:
Study of Women's Health Across the Nation-Endocrine Lab
全国女性健康研究-内分泌实验室
- 批准号:
6777932 - 财政年份:1994
- 资助金额:
$ 63.22万 - 项目类别:
Study of Women's Health Across the Nation V: Endocrinology/CLASS Laboratory
全国妇女健康研究五:内分泌/CLASS实验室
- 批准号:
8309166 - 财政年份:1994
- 资助金额:
$ 63.22万 - 项目类别:
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