Klinnert M D, Nelson H S, Price M R, Adinoff A D, Leung D Y, Mrazek D A
National Jewish Medical and Research Center, Denver, Colorado, USA.
Pediatrics. 2001 Oct;108(4):E69. doi: 10.1542/peds.108.4.e69.
In a prospective study of children with a family history of asthma, asthma onset by 3 years of age was found previously to be positively associated with variables from the first year of life, including elevated total immunoglobulin E (IgE), frequent respiratory infections, and parenting difficulties. We followed this cohort of genetically at-risk children to investigate the relationship between factors assessed in infancy and asthma, allergy, and psychological status at school age.
A cohort of 150 children who were at risk for developing asthma were identified prenatally on the basis of the mothers' having asthma. For 28 children, the father had asthma as well, putting them at bilateral genetic risk. Families primarily were middle and upper middle class Caucasians. Parents came to the clinic during the third trimester of pregnancy for assessments of medical and psychosocial functioning. A home visit took place when the infant was 3 weeks old, when parenting risk was assessed before the onset of any asthma symptoms. Parenting difficulties included problems with infant caregiving as well as components of maternal functioning, such as postpartum depression and inadequate marital support. Blood was drawn for serum IgE at 6 months of age. Parents and offspring subsequently came to the clinic multiple times, with the last clinic visit during the child's sixth year. Follow-up at age 6 involved a clinic visit for allergy and psychosocial evaluations, consisting of interviews and a behavior questionnaire. Seventy-seven children received the allergy and psychosocial evaluation, 26 received the psychosocial evaluation in the clinic, and 30 families received telephone interviews and mailed in questionnaires. Additional monitoring of families by telephone and mail was maintained over the next 2 years, until the children were 8, to ensure accurate characterization of the course of illness. Comprehensive medical records were obtained and reviewed for all health care contacts. Children were designated as having asthma when there was documentation in medical records of physician-diagnosed asthma, observed wheezing, and/or prescription of asthma medications during the time period when the child was between 6 and 8 years of age. Parental reports of the occurrence of asthma corroborated the medical record data.
Data regarding asthma status were available for 145 children through 8 years of age. Forty (28%) of the children manifested asthma between 6 and 8 years of age. Among variables previously reported to predict asthma onset by age 3, 3 proved to have significant univariate relationships with asthma between ages 6 and 8: elevated IgE levels measured when the children were 6 months of age, global ratings of parenting difficulties measured when infants were 3 weeks old, and higher numbers of respiratory infections in the first year of life. Among these offspring of mothers with asthma, paternal asthma showed a significant association with asthma between ages 6 and 8. Eczema in the first year was not significantly related to later asthma. Multiple logistic regression showed that the model that best predicted asthma at ages 6 to 8 from infancy variables included 2 main effects. The adjusted odds ratio for 6-month IgE was 2.15 (1.51, 3.05) and for parenting difficulties was 2.07 (1.15, 3.71). Although socioeconomic status (SES) was not associated with asthma at ages 6 to 8, families of lower SES were more likely to be rated as having parenting difficulties early in the child's life. The mothers of lower SES breastfed for a shorter period of time and were more likely to smoke during their infant's first year. There were more respiratory infections during the first year of life among infants whose mother was rated as having more parenting difficulties. Mothers who reported smoking breastfed their infants for a shorter length of time. Male gender was significantly associated with higher IgE levels when infants were 6 months of age. Laboratory testing was completed for 77 children at age 6. Total serum IgE levels were significantly higher for the children with asthma between ages 6 and 8. Skin-prick testing showed that the children with asthma had significantly more positive skin test reactions than did the children without asthma. Psychosocial interview data at 6 years of age were available for 103 families, and behavioral questionnaires were available for 133 families. On the basis of 6-year interviews, children with asthma were rated as being at greater psychological risk than were the children without asthma. Mothers' Child Behavior Checklist (CBCL) ratings of their children's behavior indicated higher internalizing scores for the children with asthma as compared with the children without asthma. Like the 6-month IgE, 6-year IgE was higher for boys. IgE levels measured at 6 months of age were significantly correlated with 6-year IgE levels. Parenting difficulties measured at 3 weeks were significantly correlated with 6-year measures of maternal depression, CBCL Internalizing score, and Child Psychological Risk (CPR) score. There also were significant correlations among the psychosocial variables assessed when the children were 6 years of age; maternal depression was significantly associated with child CBCL Internalizing score and CPR score, and the last 2 also were significantly correlated. Multiple logistic regression showed that 2 concurrently measured variables entered the model showing the strongest associations with asthma at ages 6 to 8. The adjusted odds ratio for CPR score was 3.21 (1.29-7.96) and for 6-year IgE was 1.71 (1.04-2.80).
This study of the natural history of childhood asthma focused on the development of asthma into the school-age years in a genetically at-risk group of children. The relationships between biological and psychosocial variables in the first year and school-age asthma support the formulation of asthma as beginning early in life, with the developing immune system interacting with environmental influences. The data provide support for the possible contribution of psychosocial factors to asthma onset and persistence into childhood.
在一项对有哮喘家族史儿童的前瞻性研究中,先前发现3岁前哮喘发病与生命第一年的一些变量呈正相关,这些变量包括总免疫球蛋白E(IgE)升高、频繁呼吸道感染和育儿困难。我们追踪了这一具有遗传风险的儿童队列,以研究婴儿期评估的因素与学龄期哮喘、过敏及心理状态之间的关系。
根据母亲患有哮喘,在产前确定了150名有患哮喘风险的儿童队列。其中28名儿童的父亲也患有哮喘,使他们处于双侧遗传风险中。这些家庭主要是中上层阶级的白种人。父母在孕期第三个月到诊所接受医疗和心理社会功能评估。婴儿3周大时进行家访,在任何哮喘症状出现之前评估育儿风险。育儿困难包括婴儿护理问题以及母亲功能的一些方面,如产后抑郁和婚姻支持不足。在婴儿6个月大时采集血液检测血清IgE。父母和孩子随后多次到诊所就诊,孩子6岁时进行最后一次诊所就诊。6岁时的随访包括一次过敏和心理社会评估的诊所就诊,包括访谈和一份行为问卷。77名儿童接受了过敏和心理社会评估,26名儿童在诊所接受了心理社会评估,30个家庭接受了电话访谈并邮寄了问卷。在接下来的2年里,通过电话和邮件对家庭进行了额外监测,直到孩子8岁,以确保准确描述疾病进程。获取并审查了所有医疗接触的综合病历。当儿童在6至8岁期间的病历中有医生诊断哮喘、观察到喘息和/或哮喘药物处方的记录时,这些儿童被认定为患有哮喘。父母关于哮喘发生情况的报告证实了病历数据。
有145名儿童的哮喘状况数据记录到8岁。其中40名(28%)儿童在6至8岁时出现哮喘。在先前报告的预测3岁前哮喘发病的变量中,有3个变量被证明与6至8岁的哮喘有显著的单变量关系:儿童6个月大时测得的IgE水平升高、婴儿3周大时育儿困难的总体评分以及生命第一年呼吸道感染次数较多。在这些母亲患有哮喘的后代中,父亲患有哮喘与6至8岁的哮喘有显著关联。第一年患湿疹与后期哮喘无显著相关性。多元逻辑回归显示,从婴儿期变量中最能预测6至8岁哮喘的模型包括2个主要效应。6个月时IgE的调整优势比为2.15(1.51,3.05),育儿困难的调整优势比为2.07(1.15,3.71)。虽然社会经济地位(SES)与6至8岁的哮喘无关,但SES较低的家庭在孩子生命早期更有可能被评为有育儿困难。SES较低的母亲母乳喂养时间较短,且在婴儿第一年更有可能吸烟。母亲被评为育儿困难较多的婴儿在生命第一年有更多的呼吸道感染。报告吸烟的母亲母乳喂养婴儿的时间较短。男性在6个月大时IgE水平显著较高。对77名6岁儿童进行了实验室检测。6至8岁患有哮喘的儿童血清总IgE水平显著更高。皮肤点刺试验显示,患有哮喘儿童的皮肤试验阳性反应明显多于无哮喘儿童。有103个家庭提供了6岁时的心理社会访谈数据,133个家庭提供了行为问卷数据。根据6岁时的访谈,患有哮喘的儿童被评为比无哮喘儿童有更大的心理风险。母亲对孩子行为的儿童行为清单(CBCL)评分显示,与无哮喘儿童相比,患有哮喘儿童的内化得分更高。与6个月时的IgE一样,6岁时男孩的IgE更高。6个月大时测得的IgE水平与6岁时的IgE水平显著相关。3周大时测得的育儿困难与6岁时母亲抑郁、CBCL内化得分和儿童心理风险(CPR)得分显著相关。在儿童6岁时评估的心理社会变量之间也存在显著相关性;母亲抑郁与儿童CBCL内化得分和CPR得分显著相关,后两者也显著相关。多元逻辑回归显示,2个同时测量的变量进入了显示与6至8岁哮喘关联最强的模型。CPR得分的调整优势比为3.21(1.29 - 7.96),6岁时IgE的调整优势比为1.71(1.04 - 2.80)。
这项关于儿童哮喘自然史的研究聚焦于一组具有遗传风险的儿童哮喘发展到学龄期的情况。生命第一年的生物和心理社会变量与学龄期哮喘之间的关系支持了哮喘始于生命早期的观点,即发育中的免疫系统与环境影响相互作用。这些数据为心理社会因素可能对哮喘发病及持续到儿童期的作用提供了支持。