Project PHOENIX is an observational clinical research study designed to characterize molecular, genomic, cellular, and functional features in blood specimens from former U.S. Service Members with prior burn pit exposure and from matched unexposed controls. Participants will complete screening, informed consent, health and exposure questionnaires, and a one-time blood collection. Blood-derived specimens may undergo genomic, epigenomic, transcriptomic, proteomic, metabolomic, immunophenotyping, and cellular functional analyses. Participants may also agree to optional future re-contact for health updates and possible repeat blood collection. The goal is to identify biologic signatures associated with prior deployment-related burn pit exposure and to support future biomarker discovery and translational research in veteran health.
Open-air burn pits used during military operations in Southwest Asia and other deployment settings have been associated with complex airborne exposures and long-term health concerns, including respiratory, cardiovascular, neurologic, immune, and oncologic sequelae. Prior studies have relied largely on self-report, clinical symptoms, or limited physiologic testing, and there remains a need for objective biologic markers of exposure-associated effects. Project PHOENIX is intended to generate a standardized, high-dimensional biospecimen and data resource that can support biomarker discovery, mechanistic modeling, and future translational research. Participants will enroll remotely. Screening, consent, and questionnaire completion will occur electronically through a secure eConsent platform. After consent, participants will complete a baseline study visit that includes eligibility confirmation, collection of demographic and exposure history and venipuncture. The exposed cohort will include former U.S. Service Members with prior deployment to locations with known burn pit operations. The control cohort will include comparable U.S. Service Members/Veterans without known burn pit deployment exposure. Planned analyses include between-group comparisons across multi-omic and cellular-function domains, assessment of exposure intensity/duration relationships, and development of integrated predictive models using statistical and machine-learning methods. Optional annual re-contact for up to 5 years may be used to update health status and obtain additional blood specimens.
Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Enrollment
1,000
History of deployment-related exposure to environments with known open-air burn pit operations, characterized by self-reported deployment/exposure history and corroborating information when available.
No known deployment-related burn pit exposure based on participant report and available service history.
Differential gene expression (RNA-seq normalized counts) between burn pit-exposed and unexposed cohorts
Comparison of whole blood transcriptomic profiles using RNA sequencing. Differential gene expression will be quantified using normalized read counts and modeled as log2 fold-change between cohorts.
Time frame: Baseline
Association of exposure intensity and duration with biologic measures
Assessment of relationships between reported exposure duration/intensity and molecular or cellular outcome measures using multivariable analyses.
Time frame: Baseline
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