HappyMums combines data from large cohorts of pregnant women and offspring around the world as well as animal models, to identify risk factors for maternal depression and the chain of molecular and biological events that are modulated by the onset of depressive symptoms in pregnancy and their consequences on the offspring. The work so far has been devoted to laying the groundwork for comprehensive analyses across different longitudinal data from large population-based birth studies and case-control studies of perinatal samples focusing on data generation, cleaning, quality control and harmonization of multiple measures of genetic, biological, environmental, lifestyle and demographic factors in mothers and the offspring.
At the same time, we successfully established and characterized 3 different mouse models of depressive-like phenotype during gestation. Moreover, we carried out a pilot experiment to establish and validate the protocol for the prenatal stress paradigm on an innovative live-bearing fish model that will be used to dissect the role of placenta.
Finally, thanks to the results obtained from co-creation meetings and other dedicated activities where multi-stakeholder requirements have been collected, the first version of the HappyMums mobile application and of the dashboard to be used by women and the clinicians respectively, have been developed and are now available. They will be tested in the HappyMums clinical study, which will recruit and monitor a sample of pregnant women at high-risk of depression, across 7 clinical recruitment centres in Europe. The set-up phase of the study, which included the preparation of the master protocol and all the related documents (recruitment materials, interviews and questionnaires, participant information sheets and consent forms) and the procedures to get ethical approval from the various ethics committees is almost complete, with 2 centres that already obtained approval and all the others in the process of getting it.
Since the beginning, great effort has been devoted to promoting the HappyMums project and raising awareness of the importance of perinatal mental health. To target a wide range of audiences, various channels have already been implemented and activities carried out. In particular, the project website (www.happymums.eu) and several social media accounts have been set up. The latter have been used to share project updates and different content regarding pregnancy and motherhood, to help women adopt healthier lifestyles and behaviours. Also, the HappyMums project has been presented in scientific symposia and generated data included in several papers; moreover, strong links have been established with other relevant projects, especially those funded within the same call.