<p xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" class="first" dir="auto"
id="d11425255e214">The ongoing COhort for Childhood Origin of Asthma and allergic
diseases (COCOA) study
is a prospective birth cohort investigating the origin and natural courses of childhood
allergic diseases, including atopic dermatitis, food allergy, allergic rhinitis and
asthma, with long-term prognosis. Initiated under the premise that allergic diseases
result from a complex interplay of immune development alterations, environmental exposures,
and host susceptibility, the COCOA study explores these dynamic interactions during
prenatal and postnatal periods, framed within the hygiene and microbial hypotheses
alongside the developmental origins of health and disease (DOHaD) hypothesis. The
scope of the COCOA study extends to genetic predispositions, indoor and outdoor environmental
variables affecting mothers and their offsprings such as outdoor and indoor air pollution,
psychological factors, diets, and the microbiomes of skin, gut, and airway. We have
embarked on in-depth investigations of diverse risk factors and the pathophysiological
underpinnings of allergic diseases. By employing multi-omics approaches-proteomics,
transcriptomics, and metabolomics-we gain deeper insights into the distinct pathophysiological
processes across various endotypes of childhood allergic diseases, incorporating the
exposome using extensive resources within the COCOA study. Integration with large-scale
datasets, such as national health insurance records, enhances robustness and mitigates
potential limitations inherent to birth cohort studies. As part of global networks
focused on childhood allergic diseases, the COCOA study fosters collaborative research
across multiple cohorts. The findings from the COCOA study are instrumental in informing
precision medicine strategies for childhood allergic diseases, underpinning the establishment
of disease trajectories.
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