4.8 Article

Early wheezing phenotypes and severity of respiratory illness in very early childhood Study on intrauterine exposure to fine particle matter

Journal

ENVIRONMENT INTERNATIONAL
Volume 35, Issue 6, Pages 877-884

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.envint.2009.03.004

Keywords

Wheezing phenotypes; Respiratory symptoms; Prenatal and postnatal environmental air quality; Birth cohort study

Funding

  1. ROI [5 RO1 ES10165 NIEHS, 02/01/00-01/31/04]
  2. NIEHS [RO1 ES010165-0451]
  3. Lundin Foundation
  4. Gladys T. and Roland Harriman Foundation

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The main goal of the paper was to assess the pattern of risk factors having an impact on the onset of early wheezing phenotypes in the birth cohort of 468 two-year olds and to investigate the severity of respiratory illness in the two-year olds in relation to both wheezing phenotypes, environmental tobacco smoke (ETS) and personal PM2.5 exposure over pregnancy period (fine particulate matter). The secondary goal of the paper was to assess possible association of early persistent wheezing with the length of the baby at birth. Pregnant women were recruited from ambulatory prenatal clinics in the first and second trimester of pregnancy. Only women 18-35 years of age, who claimed to be non-smokers, with singleton pregnancies, without illicit drug use and HIV infection, free from chronic diseases were eligible for the study. In the statistical analysis of respiratory health of children multinomial logistic regression and zero-inflated Poisson regression models were used. Approximately one third of the children in the study sample experienced wheezing in the first 2 years of life and in about two third of cases (67%) the symptom developed already in the first year of life. The early wheezing was easily reversible and in about 70% of infants with wheezing the symptom receded in the second year of life. The adjusted relative risk ratio (RRR) of persistent wheezing increased with maternal atopy (RRR=3.05: 95%CI: 1.30-7.15), older siblings (RRR = 3.05; 95%CI: 1.67-5.58) and prenatal ETS exposure (RRR = 1.13; 95%CI: 1.04-1.23), but was inversely associated with the length of baby at birth (RRR = 0.88; 95%CI: 0.76-1.01). The adjusted incidence risk ratios (IRR) of coughing, difficult breathing, runny/stuffy nose and pharyngitis/tonsillitis in wheezers were much higher than that observed among non-wheezers and significantly depended on prenatal PM2.5 exposure, older siblings and maternal atopy. The study shows a clear inverse association between maternal age or maternal education and respiratory illnesses and calls for more research efforts aiming at the explanation of factors hidden behind proxy measures of quality of maternal care of babies. The data support the hypothesis that burden of respiratory symptoms in early childhood and possibly in later life may be programmed already in prenatal period when the respiratory system is completing its growth and maturation. (C) 2009 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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