Genomic and environmental risk factors for cardiometabolic diseases in Africa: methods used for Phase 1 of the AWI-Gen population cross-sectional study

Stuart A Ali ORCID logo ; Cassandra Soo ORCID logo ; Godfred Agongo ORCID logo ; Marianne Alberts ; Lucas Amenga-Etego ORCID logo ; Romuald P Boua ORCID logo ; Ananyo Choudhury ORCID logo ; Nigel J Crowther ORCID logo ; Cornelius Depuur ORCID logo ; F Xavier Gómez-Olivé ORCID logo ; +26 more... Issa Guiraud ORCID logo ; Tilahun N Haregu ORCID logo ; Scott Hazelhurst ORCID logo ; Kathleen Kahn ORCID logo ; Christopher Khayeka-Wandabwa ORCID logo ; Catherine Kyobutungi ORCID logo ; Zané Lombard ORCID logo ; Felistas Mashinya ORCID logo ; Lisa Micklesfield ORCID logo ; Shukri F Mohamed ORCID logo ; Freedom Mukomana ORCID logo ; Seydou Nakanabo-Diallo ORCID logo ; Hamtandi M Natama ORCID logo ; Nicholas Ngomi ; Engelbert A Nonterah ORCID logo ; Shane A Norris ORCID logo ; Abraham R Oduro ; Athanase M Somé ; Hermann Sorgho ORCID logo ; Paulina Tindana ORCID logo ; Halidou Tinto ORCID logo ; Stephen Tollman ORCID logo ; Rhian Twine ORCID logo ; Alisha Wade ORCID logo ; Osman Sankoh ORCID logo ; Michèle Ramsay ORCID logo ; (2018) Genomic and environmental risk factors for cardiometabolic diseases in Africa: methods used for Phase 1 of the AWI-Gen population cross-sectional study. Global health action, 11 (sup2). p. 1507133. ISSN 1654-9716 DOI: 10.1080/16549716.2018.1507133
Copy

There is an alarming tide of cardiovascular and metabolic disease (CMD) sweeping across Africa. This may be a result of an increasingly urbanized lifestyle characterized by the growing consumption of processed and calorie-dense food, combined with physical inactivity and more sedentary behaviour. While the link between lifestyle and public health has been extensively studied in Caucasian and African American populations, few studies have been conducted in Africa. This paper describes the detailed methods for Phase 1 of the AWI-Gen study that were used to capture phenotype data and assess the associated risk factors and end points for CMD in persons over the age of 40 years in sub-Saharan Africa (SSA). We developed a population-based cross-sectional study of disease burden and phenotype in Africans, across six centres in SSA. These centres are in West Africa (Nanoro, Burkina Faso, and Navrongo, Ghana), in East Africa (Nairobi, Kenya) and in South Africa (Agincourt, Dikgale and Soweto). A total of 10,702 individuals between the ages of 40 and 60 years were recruited into the study across the six centres, plus an additional 1021 participants over the age of 60 years from the Agincourt centre. We collected socio-demographic, anthropometric, medical history, diet, physical activity, fat distribution and alcohol/tobacco consumption data from participants. Blood samples were collected for disease-related biomarker assays, and genomic DNA extraction for genome-wide association studies. Urine samples were collected to assess kidney function. The study provides base-line data for the development of a series of cohorts with a second wave of data collection in Phase 2 of the study. These data will provide valuable insights into the genetic and environmental influences on CMD on the African continent.


picture_as_pdf
Ali-etal-2018-Genomic-and-environmental-risk-factors.pdf
subject
Published Version
Available under Creative Commons: Attribution 4.0

View Download

Atom BibTeX OpenURL ContextObject in Span Multiline CSV OpenURL ContextObject Dublin Core Dublin Core MPEG-21 DIDL Data Cite XML EndNote HTML Citation JSON MARC (ASCII) MARC (ISO 2709) METS MODS RDF+N3 RDF+N-Triples RDF+XML RIOXX2 XML Reference Manager Refer Simple Metadata ASCII Citation EP3 XML
Export

Downloads