Antoun, Elie
Issarapu, Prachand
di Gravio, Chiara
Shrestha, Smeeta
Betts, Modupeh
Saffari, Ayden
Sahariah, Sirazul A.
Sankareswaran, Alagu
Arumalla, Manisha
Prentice, Andrew M.
Fall, Caroline H. D.
Silver, Matt J.
Chandak, Giriraj R.
Lillycrop, Karen A. https://orcid.org/0000-0001-7350-5489
,
Kehoe, Sarah
Kumaran, Kalyanaraman
Potdar, Ramesh D.
Sajjadi, Sara
Nongmaithem, Suraj
Chopra, Harsha
Sane, Harshad
Gandhi, Meera
Owens, Stephen
Jarjou, Landing
Prentice, Ann
Funding for this research was provided by:
Medical Research Council (MR/M0051186/1, u105960371, mc-a760-5qx00, U105960371, u123261351, mr/m01424x/1)
Medical research council (u1232661351)
Newton Fund (MR/N006208/1)
The Wellcome Trust DBT India Alliance (BT/IN/DBT-MRC/DFID/24/GRC/2015-16)
Article History
Received: 28 September 2021
Accepted: 8 December 2021
First Online: 9 January 2022
Declarations
:
: MMNP (ISRCTN62811278) was approved by the ethics committees of BYL Nair and TN Medical College, Grant Medical College, and Sir JJ Group of Hospitals, Mumbai. PMMST (ISRCTN13687662) was approved by the joint Gambia Government/Medical Research Council (MRC) Unit The Gambia's Ethics Committee. Ethics approval for the follow-up of the children in Mumbai (“SARAS KIDS”) was obtained from the Intersystem Biomedica Ethics Committee, Mumbai on 31 May 2013 (serial no. ISBEC/NR-54/KM/JVJ/2013). Ethics approval for the EMPHASIS study in The Gambia was obtained from the joint Gambia Government/MRC Unit The Gambia's Ethics Committee on 19 October 2015 (serial no. SCC 1441). The EMPHASIS study is registered as ISRCTN14266771. Signed informed consent was obtained from parents and verbal assent from the children.
: Not applicable.
: The authors declare that they have no competing interests.