Childhood asthma and the microbiome – precision health for life: The CHILD study

News

Posted on

Genome Canada’s 2017 Large-Scale Applied Research Project (LSARP) Competition will support six innovative projects led or co-led by investigators at BC Children’s Hospital, an agency of the Provincial Health Services Authority, including:

Childhood asthma and the microbiome – precision health for life: The Canadian Healthy Infant Longitudinal Development (CHILD) study

“We’re using powerful genomics technologies to study the connection between the presence of certain gut microbes early in life and the risk of developing asthma in childhood. Our goal is to find a way to identify babies at risk for asthma and treat them so they never develop the condition.” –Dr. Stuart Turvey.

Dr. Turvey is an Investigator and Director, Clinical Research, BC Children’s; and Aubrey J. Tingle Professor of Pediatric Immunology, UBC.

Asthma is the most common chronic disease of childhood, affecting one in seven Canadian children and costing the health care system more than $2-billion per year. Current treatments can manage the symptoms of asthma, but there is no effective way to prevent or cure this dangerous, chronic condition. Previous research from Dr. Stuart Turvey and the CHILD study team found that children who are missing four types of gut bacteria at three months of age are more likely to develop asthma. With this new funding, the team will further this research by using genomic technology to analyze stool samples from infants. The goal is reduce the burden of asthma by creating new diagnostic tools that will identify babies who are likely to develop the condition and develop new treatments that will replace missing gut bacteria to stop asthma before it starts.

Dr. Turvey leads this project with co-leads Dr. Michael Kobor, BC Children’s and UBC; Dr. Sara Mostafavi, BC Children’s and UBC; Dr. Brett Finlay, UBC; and Dr. Padmaja Subbarao, SickKids and McMaster University. This project is based at BC Children’s, BC Women’s and UBC.

BCCHR Communications
More by this Author

Research News

Every day, BCCHR researchers work towards breakthroughs to transform the lives of kids in BC and around the world. Learn about our latest innovations and advancements in child health.

  • News

    Genetic tools aren’t just for future patients, but cold cases too

    The world of genomic sequencing has changed dramatically in the last few decades. When the world attempted to sequence the very first human genome in the 1990s, the project took years and billions of dollars. Today, with the emergence of next-generation sequencing, a complete human genome can now be sequenced within a few days for…

    Read more
  • Dads with kid in the pool
    News

    Research supports BC families in building healthy habits to prevent childhood obesity

    Unhealthy eating patterns, low physical activity, and a lot of sedentary or screen-related habits are linked to childhood obesity risk, which can lead to elevated blood pressure, sleep problems, orthopedic issues, and mental health challenges. Obesity-prevention resources that only focus on providing information often fall short because many families already know the basics. The biggest…

    Read more
  • News

    First-in-world BC patient successfully treated for rare immune disease

    A new paper published in New England Journal of Medicine details how an 18-year-old patient being treated at BC Children’s Hospital (BCCH) for a rare disease called chronic granulomatous disease (CGD) became the first person ever to receive and be cured by a gene modification treatment known as “Prime Editing.”

    Read more

Donate to Research

With your support, we believe there’s nothing we can’t do. Funding helps bring hope out of the laboratory and into the clinic — to save and improve children’s lives.

donate now