Abbott William G H, Winship Ingrid M, Wilsher Margaret L, Nilau Malama, Tukuitonga Colin F
Department of Molecular Medicine, University of Auckland, Auckland, New Zealand.
Respirology. 2004 Nov;9(4):521-7. doi: 10.1111/j.1440-1843.2004.00601.x.
The aim of this study was to identify asthma phenotypes in patients of Niue Island ancestry that might be suitable for susceptibility gene mapping studies.
Two hundred and sixteen Niue Islanders with physician-diagnosed asthma that was not secondary to other medical conditions were recruited through community organisations. Fifty-one of the subjects with asthma were resident on Niue Island and 165 in New Zealand. Each subject was interviewed and tested for atopy, serum [IgE] (5% quantile, median, 95% quantile) and lung function.
There were two groups of subjects defined by an age of onset of asthma less than 12 years of age (childhood-onset, boys:girls 64:65) and greater than 12 years of age (adult-onset, men:women 11:76). A positive response (wheal > 3 mm) to at least one aeroallergen was seen in 181 patients, with 168/181 (92.8%) responding to house dust mite. Twenty-eight subjects with asthma were non-atopic (no detectable wheal) and the atopy status of seven subjects with asthma could not be determined (wheal < 3 mm). In childhood-onset asthma, serum IgE levels were higher (P < 0.0001) in subjects with atopic than in subjects with non-atopic asthma. In adult-onset asthma, serum IgE levels were higher (P < 0.0001) in subjects with atopic asthma than in either subjects with non-atopic asthma or matched non-atopic subjects without asthma. The asthma phenotypes in Niue Island and New Zealand residents were similar.
Both atopic and non-atopic asthma phenotypes exist in Niue Islanders resident in Niue and New Zealand. The potential for mapping asthma susceptibility genes in this isolated population is discussed.