IMPROVing lifElong health and development for children and adults born very PRETERM – observational studies to enhance randomised trials for comparative effectiveness research
Acronym
IMPROVE PRETERM
Description of the granted funding
IMPROVE PRETERM aims to optimise the discovery and use of cost-effective, affordable and accessible interventions at birth and in early childhood to mitigate the adverse consequences of very preterm birth (VPT; <32 weeks of gestation). These include cerebral palsy, motor and cognitive impairment, visual/auditory deficits, respiratory illnesses, and psychiatric disorders and affect lifelong health and wellbeing. The VPT population is of high public health need as long-term outcomes are not improving despite increased survival, due to logistic and ethical challenges in generating evidence on effective interventions, leading to unstandardised and suboptimal care.
Multidisciplinary, geographically diverse (13 country) research teams, working with key stakeholders (families, patients, health professionals and policymakers) will leverage advances in causal inference methods and optimise existing data sources (trials, cohort studies, birth registers, neonatal networks) within an established European federated platform for Comparative Effectiveness Research (CER). Use Cases will compare high-priority interventions: 1) antenatal and postnatal corticosteroid treatment, 2) follow-up and intervention programmes and 3) vaccine strategies. Capacity-building outputs will be: 1) a generalisable Lifecourse CER Framework (core outcome sets, methodological guidelines for causal inference and economic evaluation); 2) an open-source validated and standardised parent-report tool for assessing child development; 3) data sources (>30) and analytic methods on a sustainable, privacy-preserving FAIR platform.
IMPROVE PRETERM will consider a broad range of patient-valued outcomes, extending current assessment periods beyond infancy, to provide holistic, cost-effective solutions for high-quality CER. Outputs will improve the use of evidence-based care by clinicians and policymakers, reduce the preventable health burden and promote better quality of life for VPT individuals and their families.
Show moreStarting year
2025
End year
2028
Granted funding
VARSINAIS-SUOMEN HYVINVOINTIALUE
182 500 €
Participant
EPIGENY (FR)
85 000 €
Participant
INSTITUTO DE SAUDE PUBLICA DA UNIVERSIDADE DO PORTO (PT)
306 312.5 €
Participant
EUROPEAN FOUNDATION FOR THE CARE OF NEWBORN INFANTS (DE)
574 098.75 €
Participant
UNIVERSITAIR ZIEKENHUIS ANTWERPEN (BE)
53 165.13 €
Participant
UNIVERSITAETSKLINIKUM WUERZBURG - KLINIKUM DER BAYERISCHEN JULIUS-MAXIMILIANS-UNIVERSITAT (DE)
632 719.64 €
Participant
IRCCS - ASSOCIAZIONE LA NOSTRA FAMIGLIA 'ISTITUTO SCIENTIFICO EUGENIO MEDEA' (IT)
121 750 €
Participant
UNIWERSYTET MEDYCZNY IM KAROLA MARCINKOWSKIEGO W POZNANIU (PL)
105 750 €
Participant
INESC TEC - INSTITUTO DE ENGENHARIADE SISTEMAS E COMPUTADORES, TECNOLOGIA E CIENCIA (PT)
690 850 €
Participant
TARTU ULIKOOL (EE)
117 000 €
Participant
INSERM - TRANSFERT SA (FR)
393 745.28 €
Participant
UNIVERSITAT ZURICH (CH)
Participant
THE UNIVERSITY OF WARWICK (UK)
195 198.41 €
Participant
NORGES TEKNISK-NATURVITENSKAPELIGE UNIVERSITET NTNU (NO)
767 753.95 €
Participant
KAROLINSKA INSTITUTET (SE)
410 877.5 €
Participant
THE CHANCELLOR, MASTERS AND SCHOLARS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF OXFORD (UK)
373 375.15 €
Participant
UNIVERSITY OF LEICESTER (UK)
882 167.75 €
Participant
KOBENHAVNS UNIVERSITET (DK)
254 356.33 €
Participant
INSTITUT NATIONAL DE LA SANTE ET DE LA RECHERCHE MEDICALE (FR)
788 252.5 €
Coordinator
Amount granted
7 668 748 €
Funder
European Union
Funding instrument
HORIZON Research and Innovation Actions
Framework programme
Horizon Europe (HORIZON)
Call
Programme part
Health (11673 Non-Communicable and Rare Diseases (11691 )
Topic
Comparative effectiveness research for healthcare interventions in areas of high public health need (HORIZON-HLTH-2024-DISEASE-03-08-two-stageCall ID
HORIZON-HLTH-2024-DISEASE-03-two-stage Other information
Funding decision number
101156325
Identified topics
gynecology, pediatrics