1 Division of Biostatistics and Bioinformatics, Institute of Population Health Sciences, National Health Research Institutes, Zhunan, Taiwan.
2 Allergy and Clinical Immunology Research Centre, National Cheng Kung University, Tainan, Taiwan.
Ann Am Thorac Soc. 2018 Oct;15(10):1197-1204. doi: 10.1513/AnnalsATS.201712-921OC.
The prevalence of childhood asthma has been increasing worldwide in parallel with childhood obesity.
We investigated whether there is a temporal relationship between early life weight gain (reflecting growth velocity) and early life body mass index (BMI) attained status (reflecting accumulative weight) with future risk of asthma in the Boston Birth Cohort.
This report includes 1,928 children from the Boston Birth Cohort with a mean age of 7.8 years (standard deviation, 3.3 yr), enrolled at birth and followed prospectively. Asthma was defined using physician diagnosis code (International Classification of Diseases, Ninth Revision, Clinical Modification code 493.xx) in children 2 years and older. We categorized the children by their weight gain trajectory on the basis of changes in z-scores: slow (less than -0.67), on track (-0.67 to 0.67), rapid (0.67-1.28), and extremely rapid (>1.28); and by their BMI attained status (underweight, normal weight, and overweight) during the first 4, 12, and 24 months. Poisson regression models with robust variance estimation were applied to examine the relationship between early life weight gain/attained BMI and asthma.
During the first 4 months of life, 37% had on-track weight grain, 22% had slow weight gain, 15% had rapid weight gain, and 26% had extremely rapid weight gain. At 4 months, 61% were normal weight, 7% were underweight, and 32% were overweight. In adjusted analyses, extremely rapid early life weight gain during the first 4 and 24 months of life were each associated with increased risks of asthma (risk ratio, 1.34 for extremely rapid weight gain at 4 months; 95% confidence interval [CI], 1.06-1.70; risk ratio, 1.32 for extremely rapid weight gain at 24 months; 95% CI, 1.00-1.75) Similarly, overweight at 4, 12, and 24 months were each associated with an increased risk of asthma. Analyses that further adjusted for birthweight or preterm birth showed similar findings.
In this predominantly urban U.S. low-income minority birth cohort, excessive early life weight gain and overweight status were both associated with an increased risk of asthma in childhood.
儿童哮喘的发病率在全球范围内呈上升趋势,与儿童肥胖的流行趋势呈平行关系。
我们通过对波士顿出生队列研究中的儿童进行调查,旨在探究早期生活中体重的增加(反映生长速度)与早期生活中获得的体重指数(反映累积体重)与未来哮喘风险之间是否存在时间关系。
本报告纳入了波士顿出生队列中的 1928 名儿童,平均年龄为 7.8 岁(标准差为 3.3 岁),他们在出生时即入组并进行前瞻性随访。2 岁及以上儿童的哮喘诊断采用国际疾病分类第 9 版临床修订版(ICD-9-CM)的医师诊断代码(493.xx)进行定义。我们根据体重 z 评分的变化将儿童分为以下几类:增长缓慢(小于-0.67)、增长正常(-0.67 至 0.67)、增长迅速(0.67-1.28)和增长过快(大于 1.28);根据儿童在第 4、12 和 24 个月时获得的 BMI 状态(体重过轻、正常体重和超重)进行分类。应用泊松回归模型进行稳健方差估计,以检验早期体重增加/获得的 BMI 与哮喘之间的关系。
在生命的前 4 个月中,37%的儿童体重增长正常,22%的儿童体重增长缓慢,15%的儿童体重增长迅速,26%的儿童体重增长过快。在 4 个月时,61%的儿童体重正常,7%的儿童体重过轻,32%的儿童超重。在调整后的分析中,生命前 4 个月和 24 个月的快速早期体重增长均与哮喘风险增加相关(4 个月时体重快速增长的风险比为 1.34,95%置信区间[CI]为 1.06-1.70;24 个月时体重快速增长的风险比为 1.32,95%CI 为 1.00-1.75)。同样,4、12 和 24 个月时超重也与哮喘风险增加相关。进一步调整出生体重或早产的分析结果也显示出类似的结果。
在本研究中,该以美国城市低收入少数族裔为主体的出生队列中,早期过度的体重增加和超重状态均与儿童哮喘风险增加相关。