Tasmanian Longitudinal Health Study

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Proband follow-up studies

If you are interested, you can read our cohort profile paper to learn more about the types of data collected for each of the follow-up studies between 1968-2016.

Year: 1968
Age: 7
Data collection: Questionnaire and a Laboratory study
Questionnaire completed: 8583 participants
Laboratory study: 8022 participants

Study description:

This study was designed to look at the prevalence and natural history of childhood asthma. In 1968, the names of all children born in 1961, who were attending school in Tasmania at the time were obtained. A set of questionnaires relating to the medical history of each child was sent to the parents. A completed survey was returned by the parents of 8583 (98.8%) children. Once the questionnaires were returned, 8022 (93.5%) of the children were invited to have a medical examination to look at the upper and lower respiratory airways, and they also had a spirometry test.

Year: 1974 (The 2nd decade follow up study)
Age: 12
Data collection: Questionnaire and a laboratory study
Questionnaire completed: 7380 participants
Laboratory study: 837 participants

Study description:

This was the first follow-up study of the original cohort. 7380 children were traced and completed another set of respiratory questionnaires. A small number of children were randomly selected to have a clinic visit if they reported they had symptoms of cough and wheeze in the 1968 and 1974 surveys. Of these children, 837 had a clinical study that included another spirometry test.

Year: 1979 (The 3rd decade follow up study)
Age: 18
Data collection: Questionnaire and a laboratory study
Questionnaire completed: 658 participants
Laboratory study: 218 participants

Study description:

Those that participated in the clinical study in 1974 were invited to have another clinical study. 658 participants completed a brief postal survey, and only 218 continued to do a clinical study, which also included a spirometry test.

Year: 1991-1993 (The 4th decade follow up study)
Age: 30 (average)
Data collection: Questionnaire
Questionnaire completed: 1501 participants

Study description:

This was the third study of the original cohort. 2000 participants were selected based on their asthma status in 1968. Of those invited, 1501 completed a postal questionnaire. A clinical study was not done for this follow-up.

The ASTHMA RICH FAMILIES study was started in 1996, when the probands, their  parents, siblings, partner, and children may have completed a questionnaire on asthma and had a skin prick test for allergy

Year: 2002-2008 (The 5th decade follow up study)
Age: 43-45 years
Data collection: Questionnaire and a laboratory study
Questionnaire completed: 5729 participants
Laboratory study: 1405 participants

Study description:

This project was designed to improve our understanding of the causes of chronic respiratory diseases (CRDs) in adults. CRDs are clearly a major public health problem, but there were no good data on the natural history and risk factors for these diseases. Regular follow-up through childhood to adulthood is the best method to examine these factors, but such data were lacking due to difficulties in conducting long-term studies. The TAHS is one of the world’s most important resources of such information. Information on all respiratory problems was collected in all the follow-ups, although the main focus of the TAS until this follow-up has been asthma. The probands of TAHS have now reached the age at which all CRD as a group are beginning to inflict an increasing disease burden, which will become greater in the next two decades. Hence, TAS provided an ideal opportunity to examine the potential risk factors and natural history of and of CRDs using data collected in the past and new data collected at this follow-up.

We traced 7562 (88%) of the original probands, 5729 (78%) of these responded to a postal survey. A subgroup of 2373 participants was invited for a laboratory study and 1405 (60%) of them attended our laboratories located in Tasmania, Victoria, NSW, and Queensland.

Year: 2010-2012 (The bronchial hyperresponsiveness study)
Age: 49.6 (average)
Data collection: Laboratory study
Laboratory study: 840 participants

Study description:

Increased airway reactivity (also called Bronchial Hyper-Reactivity, BHR) in middle-age increases the risk of chronic respiratory diseases (CRDs) in old age, which are recognized as a major public health problem. Knowledge of the causes of these conditions is currently limited. This project was designed to improve our understanding of the childhood and adult causes of increased reactivity of the airways in middle-age. This knowledge will help to identify strategies to prevent CRDs in old age. Participants who took part in the 2002 clinical study were invited to undertake another clinical study that included bronchial hyperreactivity (BHR) testing. Of 1405 that were invited, 840 participated in the clinical study. A questionnaire was not done.

Year: 2012-2016 (The 6th decade follow up study)
Age: 52.9 (average)
Data collection: Questionnaire and a laboratory study
Questionnaire completed: 2659 participants
Laboratory study: 2659 participants
Sleep study: 424 participants

Study description:

This was the latest completed study of the TAHS. This follow-up study involved a clinical study that includes lung function testing and questionnaires of all living and traceable probands of the cohort. Valid contact details were available for 6128 participants from the previous follow-up study, and they were invited to the study. Of those who consented to participate, 2659 were involved in the clinical study and completed questionnaires. At this stage, a sleep study and screening questionnaires for sleep apnea were introduced to the study as this condition is common for people above 50 years of age. A small number of 772 participants were randomly selected to have a sleep study, of which 424 agreed to participate.

Other TAHS Studies

Year: 2010-2013
Data collection: Questionnaire
Questionnaire completed: 5111

Study description:

This study will survey the surviving TAHS parents and collect a sample of blood for DNA from the parents whose children have already attended the labs (did we end up doing this? The cohort profile only has information on a questionnaire being done) This study is highly cost-effective since we have already investigated the nuclear family members of the TAHS cohort. Only a small amount of additional information from the parents of the TAHS is needed to expand the study to a full family dataset. We will use sophisticated statistical methods to analyze the family data of this unique longitudinal study to investigate the effects of genetic factors and their interaction with environmental factors on the lifetime risk of allergies

This was the only follow-up study of the parents whose children were probands of the 1968 baseline study. Of those alive and traced to an address, 5111 responded to a postal survey done between 2010 and 2013, and this response represents 31.5% of the original parent population.

Year: 2007
Data collection: Questionnaire and a laboratory study
Questionnaire completed: 12073 participants
Laboratory completed: 1659 participants

Study description:

Some children with asthma continue to have asthma as adults and/or develop Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (COPD) while others are free of any adult CRD. Some of those who do not have childhood asthma develop asthma and/or COPD as adults, while the others remain free of CRDs from childhood to adulthood. Follow-up of siblings overtime is a powerful tool to investigate risk factors for these changes. As siblings share their childhood environment, but not usually the adult environment, it helps to disentangle childhood environment, adult environment and genetic factors. The completed follow-up of the TAHS probands together with baseline data provided a unique opportunity for conducting a sibling study, which could concurrently examine genes, childhood environment and adult environment for change in CRDs. .

This first and only sibling follow-up commenced in 2007 and involved a postal survey of all traced siblings from the original 1968 cohort (21 036) and a clinical study of a sub-sample of participants. 12073 participants completed a postal questionnaire, and a sub-population of 2662 participants were invited to have a clinical study, based on their reported status of asthma or cough in childhood or adulthood. Of those invited, 1801 attended our laboratories in Tasmania, Victoria, Queensland and New South Wales.

Year: 2009-2012
Age: 47-50
Data collection: Questionnaire and a laboratory study
Questionnaire completed: 825 participants
Laboratory completed: 490 participants

Study description:

Mammographic density is one of the strongest risk factors for breast cancer. Mammographic density is measured from mammograms of a woman’s breast. The amount of dense and non-density tissues a woman has can vary and is a strong risk factor for breast cancer. Women of the same age with large amounts of dense area are more likely to develop breast cancer than women with little or no density.  Mammographic density is influenced by age and also environmental and genetic factors. Identifying factors linked to density will increase our understanding of breast cancer.

One factor thought to be important in the amount of density a woman has is early life growth. The TAHS study has information on early-life growth so we invited 1967 participants to take part in our study. Of those invited, 825 completed a questionnaire, and 490 participants had a mammogram.