The Food and Microbiome Longitudinal Investigation (FAMiLI) Study: an Asian American (AsA) Enriched Multi-ethnic Environmental Cohort

Scritto il 29/06/2026
da Jiyoung Ahn

Cancer Epidemiol Biomarkers Prev. 2026 Jun 29. doi: 10.1158/1055-9965.EPI-26-0178. Online ahead of print.

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Over 90% of Asian American (AsA) adults are first- or second-generation immigrants, undergoing substantial environmental and sociocultural transitions; yet most environmental epidemiology cohorts have included few AsA participants.

METHODS: The Food and Microbiome Longitudinal Investigation (FAMiLI) is an environmental health cohort enriched with AsA adults (predominantly Korean and Chinese American) and designed to capture environmental exposures, dietary acculturation, and sociocultural factors across immigration generations. Its biobank-including buccal and stool specimens-supports research on the oral and gut microbiomes, human genomics, and other multi-omics.

RESULTS: Since its launch in 2018, FAMiLI has completed baseline recruitment and biospecimen collection for 13,183 adults aged 40-75 years. The cohort is now expanding to include an additional 3,000 Asian American adults, bringing the total to approximately 16,000 participants, with an expected distribution of ~50% Asian American and ~50% from other racial/ethnic groups. This expansion provides an opportunity to examine AsA environmental health experiences within the broader U.S.

CONCLUSIONS: FAMiLI is a unique national resource to address priority questions in environmental health, including microbiome and exposome science, individual susceptibility, and large-scale data analytics.

IMPACT: The cohort supports investigation of critical windows of environmental change across the immigration experience, racial and ethnic disparities, and drivers of emerging health outcomes, including cancer, cardiovascular disease, diabetes and other outcomes. This cohort offers essential data to inform prevention strategies and shape public health policy to improve health outcomes in AsA communities.

PMID:42371650 | DOI:10.1158/1055-9965.EPI-26-0178