Department of Allergy, Guy's and St Thomas' NHS Foundation Trust, King's College London, London, UK.
Institute of Epidemiology, University of Ulm, Ulm, Germany.
Lancet. 2015 Feb 26;385 Suppl 1:S99. doi: 10.1016/S0140-6736(15)60414-7.
Numerous studies have reported a positive association between damp housing conditions and asthma, but little is known about indoor environmental exposures in relation to childhood eczema. We aimed to specifically investigate the effect of indoor mould and dampness on eczema risk in the International Study of Asthma and Allergies in Childhood (ISAAC).
ISAAC Phase 2 is a cross-sectional study of 46 051 children aged 8-12 years from 20 countries. Information on demographics, eczema symptoms, and dampness was gathered with parental questionnaires. Children were examined for eczema and underwent skin prick testing. In a stratified subgroup, dust samples were collected to measure house dust mite exposure. Sex, maternal education, parental allergy, pet ownership, maternal smoking, having an older sibling, bedroom sharing, and cooking with fuels were explored as potential confounders or effect modifiers in logistic regression analysis.
Current residential exposure to dampness and mould was significantly associated with flexural eczema in the previous year, with a stronger association seen in non-affluent than in affluent countries (adjusted odds ratio [OR] 1·96, 95% CI 1·62-2·37, vs 1·34, 1·18-1·51). Dampness and mould in the first year of life was also significantly associated with parent-reported eczema ever (1·94, 1·40-2·68, vs 1·43, 1·28-1·60). However, the association with flexural eczema on examination was not significant (0·93, 0·76-1·13). Risk estimates were similar in children positive and negative on skin prick testing, and were not appreciably altered by the effect modifiers, apart from parental allergic disease (parental allergies OR 1·35, 95% CI 1·18-1·54, vs no parental allergies 1·61, 1·37-1·90).
These data suggest an association between damp housing conditions and childhood eczema symptoms, which may be causal. Further work is needed to elucidate possible mechanisms. Modification to home environment to reduce dampness and mould could be harnessed to improve or even prevent this common and debilitating condition.
None.
许多研究报告称,潮湿的住房条件与哮喘之间存在正相关关系,但对于与儿童湿疹有关的室内环境暴露知之甚少。我们旨在专门研究国际儿童哮喘和过敏研究(ISAAC)中室内霉菌和潮湿对湿疹风险的影响。
ISAAC 阶段 2 是一项来自 20 个国家的 46051 名 8-12 岁儿童的横断面研究。通过父母问卷收集有关人口统计学、湿疹症状和潮湿的信息。对儿童进行湿疹检查并进行皮肤点刺试验。在分层亚组中,收集灰尘样本以测量室内尘螨暴露量。在逻辑回归分析中,探讨了性别、母亲教育程度、父母过敏、宠物拥有、母亲吸烟、有兄弟姐妹、卧室共享和使用燃料做饭等因素作为潜在的混杂因素或效应修饰剂。
当前居住环境中潮湿和霉菌与前一年的屈侧湿疹显著相关,在不富裕国家的关联强于富裕国家(调整后的优势比[OR]1.96,95%CI1.62-2.37,与 1.34,1.18-1.51)。生命第一年的潮湿和霉菌也与父母报告的湿疹(1.94,1.40-2.68,与 1.43,1.28-1.60)显著相关。然而,与检查时的屈侧湿疹的关联并不显著(0.93,0.76-1.13)。皮肤点刺试验阳性和阴性的儿童的风险估计值相似,除了父母过敏疾病(父母过敏 OR 1.35,95%CI1.18-1.54,与无父母过敏 1.61,1.37-1.90)外,其他效应修饰剂对风险估计值没有明显改变。
这些数据表明潮湿的住房条件与儿童湿疹症状之间存在关联,这可能是因果关系。需要进一步的工作来阐明可能的机制。为了减少潮湿和霉菌,可以对家庭环境进行改造,以改善甚至预防这种常见且使人衰弱的疾病。
无。