Jackson Daniel J, Gangnon Ronald E, Evans Michael D, Roberg Kathy A, Anderson Elizabeth L, Pappas Tressa E, Printz Magnolia C, Lee Wai-Ming, Shult Peter A, Reisdorf Erik, Carlson-Dakes Kirsten T, Salazar Lisa P, DaSilva Douglas F, Tisler Christopher J, Gern James E, Lemanske Robert F
Department of Pediatrics, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, WI, USA.
Am J Respir Crit Care Med. 2008 Oct 1;178(7):667-72. doi: 10.1164/rccm.200802-309OC. Epub 2008 Jun 19.
Virus-induced wheezing episodes in infancy often precede the development of asthma. Whether infections with specific viral pathogens confer differential future asthma risk is incompletely understood.
To define the relationship between specific viral illnesses and early childhood asthma development.
A total of 259 children were followed prospectively from birth to 6 years of age. The etiology and timing of specific viral wheezing respiratory illnesses during early childhood were assessed using nasal lavage, culture, and multiplex reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction. The relationships of these virus-specific wheezing illnesses and other risk factors to the development of asthma were analyzed.
Viral etiologies were identified in 90% of wheezing illnesses. From birth to age 3 years, wheezing with respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) (odds ratio [OR], 2.6), rhinovirus (RV) (OR, 9.8), or both RV and RSV (OR , 10) was associated with increased asthma risk at age 6 years. In Year 1, both RV wheezing (OR, 2.8) and aeroallergen sensitization (OR, 3.6) independently increased asthma risk at age 6 years. By age 3 years, wheezing with RV (OR, 25.6) was more strongly associated with asthma at age 6 years than aeroallergen sensitization (OR, 3.4). Nearly 90% (26 of 30) of children who wheezed with RV in Year 3 had asthma at 6 years of age.
Among outpatient viral wheezing illnesses in infancy and early childhood, those caused by RV infections are the most significant predictors of the subsequent development of asthma at age 6 years in a high-risk birth cohort.
婴儿期病毒诱发的喘息发作常常先于哮喘的发生。特定病毒病原体感染是否会带来不同的未来哮喘风险尚未完全明确。
明确特定病毒性疾病与儿童早期哮喘发生之间的关系。
对259名儿童从出生到6岁进行前瞻性随访。通过鼻腔灌洗、培养及多重逆转录酶-聚合酶链反应评估儿童早期特定病毒性喘息性呼吸道疾病的病因及发病时间。分析这些病毒特异性喘息性疾病及其他风险因素与哮喘发生的关系。
90%的喘息性疾病可确定病毒病因。从出生到3岁,呼吸道合胞病毒(RSV)诱发的喘息(优势比[OR],2.6)、鼻病毒(RV)诱发的喘息(OR,9.8)或RV和RSV共同诱发的喘息(OR,10)与6岁时哮喘风险增加相关。在第1年,RV诱发的喘息(OR,2.8)和气源性变应原致敏(OR,3.6)均独立增加6岁时的哮喘风险。到3岁时,RV诱发的喘息(OR,25.6)与6岁时哮喘的关联比气源性变应原致敏(OR,3.4)更强。第3年因RV喘息的儿童中,近90%(30例中的26例)在6岁时患有哮喘。
在婴儿期和儿童早期的门诊病毒性喘息性疾病中,RV感染所致疾病是高危出生队列中6岁时哮喘后续发生的最重要预测因素。