The Singapore Preconception Study of Long-Term Maternal and Child Outcomes (S-PRESTO)
is a preconception, longitudinal cohort study that aims to study the effects of nutrition,
lifestyle, and maternal mood prior to and during pregnancy on the epigenome of the
offspring and clinically important outcomes including duration of gestation, fetal
growth, metabolic and neural phenotypes in the offspring. Between February 2015 and
October 2017, the S-PRESTO study recruited 1039 Chinese, Malay or Indian (or any combinations
thereof) women aged 18-45 years and who intended to get pregnant and deliver in Singapore,
resulting in 1032 unique participants and 373 children born in the cohort. The participants
were followed up for 3 visits during the preconception phase and censored at 12 months
of follow up if pregnancy was not achieved (N = 557 censored). Women who successfully
conceived (N = 475) were characterised at gestational weeks 6-8, 11-13, 18-21, 24-26,
27-28 and 34-36. Follow up of their index offspring (N = 373 singletons) is on-going
at birth, 1, 3 and 6 weeks, 3, 6, 12, 18, 24 and 36 months and beyond. Women are also
being followed up post-delivery. Data is collected via interviewer-administered questionnaires,
metabolic imaging (magnetic resonance imaging), standardized anthropometric measurements
and collection of diverse specimens, i.e. blood, urine, buccal smear, stool, skin
tapes, epithelial swabs at numerous timepoints. S-PRESTO has extensive repeated data
collected which include genetic and epigenetic sampling from preconception which is
unique in mother-offspring epidemiological cohorts. This enables prospective assessment
of a wide array of potential determinants of future health outcomes in women from
preconception to post-delivery and in their offspring across the earliest development
from embryonic stages into early childhood. In addition, the S-PRESTO study draws
from the three major Asian ethnic groups that represent 50% of the global population,
increasing the relevance of its findings to global efforts to address non-communicable
diseases.