Rosa Maria José, Lee Alison G, Wright Rosalind J
Department of Environmental Medicine and Public Health.
Division of Pulmonary, Critical Care and Sleep Medicine, Department of Medicine.
Curr Opin Allergy Clin Immunol. 2018 Apr;18(2):148-158. doi: 10.1097/ACI.0000000000000421.
The objective of this review is to provide an update on our evolving understanding of the effects of stress in pregnancy and during early development on the onset of asthma-related phenotypes across childhood, adolescence, and into early adulthood.
Accumulating evidence over the past 2 decades has established that prenatal and early-life psychological stress and stress correlates (e.g., maternal anxiety or depression) increase the risk for childhood respiratory disorders. Recent systematic reviews and meta-analyses including numerous prospective epidemiological and case-control studies substantiate a significant effect of prenatal stress and stress in early childhood on the development of wheeze, asthma, and other atopic-related disorders (eczema and allergic rhinitis), with many studies showing an exposure-response relationship. Offspring of both sexes are susceptible to perinatal stress, but effects differ. The impact of stress on child wheeze/asthma can also be modified by exposure timing. Moreover, coexposure to prenatal stress can enhance the effect of chemical stressors, such as prenatal traffic-related air pollution, on childhood respiratory disease risk. Understanding complex interactions among exposure dose, timing, child sex, and concurrent environmental exposures promises to more fully characterize stress effects and identify susceptible subgroups. Although the link between perinatal stress and childhood asthma-related phenotypes is now well established, pathways by which stress predisposes children to chronic respiratory disorders are not as well delineated. Mechanisms central to the pathophysiology of wheeze/asthma and lung growth and development overlap and involve a cascade of events that include disrupted immune, neuroendocrine, and autonomic function as well as oxidative stress. Altered homeostatic functioning of these integrated systems during development can enhance vulnerability to asthma and altered lung development.
Mechanistic studies that more comprehensively assess biomarkers reflecting alterations across interrelated stress response systems and associated regulatory processes, in both pregnant women and young children, could be highly informative. Leveraging high-throughput systems-wide technologies to include epigenomics (e.g., DNA methylation, microRNAs), transcriptomics, and microbiomics as well as integrated multiomics are needed to advance this field of science. Understanding stress-induced physiological changes occurring during vulnerable life periods that contribute to chronic respiratory disease risk could lead to the development of preventive strategies and novel therapeutic interventions.
本综述的目的是更新我们对孕期及早期发育阶段应激对儿童期、青少年期直至成年早期哮喘相关表型发生发展影响的不断演变的认识。
过去20年中积累的证据表明,产前及生命早期的心理应激及其相关因素(如母亲焦虑或抑郁)会增加儿童呼吸系统疾病的风险。最近的系统评价和荟萃分析纳入了众多前瞻性流行病学研究和病例对照研究,证实了产前应激和幼儿期应激对喘息、哮喘及其他特应性相关疾病(湿疹和过敏性鼻炎)发生发展的显著影响;许多研究显示了暴露-反应关系。两性后代均易受围产期应激影响,但影响有所不同。应激对儿童喘息/哮喘的影响也可因暴露时间而异。此外,产前应激与化学应激源(如与交通相关的产前空气污染)共同暴露可增强其对儿童呼吸系统疾病风险的影响。了解暴露剂量、时间、儿童性别及同时存在的环境暴露之间的复杂相互作用,有望更全面地描述应激影响并识别易感亚组。虽然围产期应激与儿童哮喘相关表型之间的联系现已明确,但应激使儿童易患慢性呼吸系统疾病的途径尚未完全阐明。喘息/哮喘病理生理学及肺生长发育的核心机制相互重叠,涉及一系列事件,包括免疫功能、神经内分泌功能和自主神经功能紊乱以及氧化应激。发育过程中这些整合系统的稳态功能改变可增加患哮喘的易感性并改变肺发育。
对孕妇和幼儿进行更全面评估反映相互关联的应激反应系统及相关调节过程改变的生物标志物的机制研究,可能具有很高的信息量。需要利用高通量全系统技术,包括表观基因组学(如DNA甲基化、微小RNA)、转录组学和微生物组学以及整合多组学,以推动该科学领域的发展。了解在脆弱生命阶段发生的导致慢性呼吸系统疾病风险的应激诱导生理变化,可能会促成预防策略和新型治疗干预措施得以开发。