Ong Thida, Schechter Michael, Yang Jing, Peng Limin, Emerson Julia, Gibson Ronald L, Morgan Wayne, Rosenfeld Margaret
Division of Pulmonary and Sleep Medicine, Department of Pediatrics, University of Washington, Seattle, Washington;
Division of Pulmonary Medicine, Department of Pediatrics, Virginia Commonwealth University, Children's Hospital of Richmond at VCU, Richmond, Virginia.
Pediatrics. 2017 Feb;139(2). doi: 10.1542/peds.2016-2730. Epub 2017 Jan 16.
Lower socioeconomic status (SES) and environmental tobacco smoke (ETS) exposure are both associated with poorer disease outcomes in cystic fibrosis (CF), and children with low SES are disproportionately exposed to ETS. We analyzed a large cohort of young children with CF to distinguish the impact of SES and ETS on clinical outcomes.
The Early Pseudomonas Infection Control Observational study enrolled Pseudomonas-negative young children with CF <13 years of age. An enrollment survey assessed SES and ETS exposures. Forced expiratory volume in 1 second (FEV), crackles and wheezes, and weight-for-age percentile were assessed at each clinical encounter over at least 4 years. Repeated measures analyses estimated the association of SES and ETS exposures with longitudinal clinical outcomes, adjusting for confounders.
Of 1797 participants, 1375 were eligible for analysis. Maternal education was high school or less in 28.1%, 26.8% had household income <$40 000, and 43.8% had Medicaid or no insurance. Maternal smoking after birth was present in 24.8%, more prevalent in household with low SES. In separate models, lower SES and ETS exposure were significantly associated with lower FEV% predicted, presence of crackles or wheezes, and lower weight percentile. In combined models, effect estimates for SES changed minimally after adjustment for ETS exposures, whereas estimates for ETS exposures were attenuated after adjusting for SES.
ETS exposure was disproportionately high in low SES families in this cohort of children with CF. Lower SES and ETS exposure had independent adverse effects on pulmonary and nutritional outcomes. Estimated effect of SES on FEV decreased minimally after ETS adjustment, suggesting health disparity risks independent of ETS exposure.
社会经济地位较低(SES)和接触环境烟草烟雾(ETS)均与囊性纤维化(CF)患者较差的疾病预后相关,且社会经济地位较低的儿童接触ETS的比例过高。我们分析了一大群患有CF的幼儿,以区分SES和ETS对临床结局的影响。
早期铜绿假单胞菌感染控制观察性研究纳入了年龄小于13岁、铜绿假单胞菌检测呈阴性的CF幼儿。一项入组调查评估了SES和ETS暴露情况。在至少4年的每次临床就诊时,评估1秒用力呼气量(FEV)、啰音和喘息,以及年龄别体重百分位数。重复测量分析估计了SES和ETS暴露与纵向临床结局之间的关联,并对混杂因素进行了调整。
在1797名参与者中,1375名符合分析条件。28.1%的母亲受教育程度为高中或以下,26.8%的家庭收入低于40000美元,43.8%的人有医疗补助或无保险。产后母亲吸烟的比例为24.8%,在社会经济地位较低的家庭中更为普遍。在单独的模型中,较低的SES和ETS暴露与预测的FEV%较低、存在啰音或喘息以及较低的体重百分位数显著相关。在联合模型中,调整ETS暴露后,SES的效应估计变化很小,而调整SES后,ETS暴露的估计值减弱。
在这一队列的CF儿童中,社会经济地位较低的家庭中ETS暴露比例过高。较低的SES和ETS暴露对肺部和营养结局有独立的不良影响。调整ETS后SES对FEV的估计效应下降很小,表明存在与ETS暴露无关的健康差异风险。