Department of Family Medicine, Oregon Health and Science University, Portland, OR, USA.
Division of Biostatistics, School of Public Health, Oregon Health and Science University, Portland State University, Portland, OR, USA.
J Asthma. 2020 Dec;57(12):1288-1297. doi: 10.1080/02770903.2019.1656228. Epub 2019 Aug 22.
: Comorbid asthma and obesity leads to poorer asthma outcomes, partially due to decreased response to controller medication. Increased oral steroid prescription, a marker of uncontrolled asthma, may follow. Little is known about this phenomenon among Latino children. Our objective was to determine whether obesity is associated with increased oral steroid prescription for children with asthma, and to assess potential disparities in these associations between Latino and non-Hispanic white children. We examined electronic health record data from the ADVANCE national network of community health centers. The sample included 16,763 children aged 5-17 years with an asthma diagnosis and ≥1 ambulatory visit in ADVANCE clinics across 22 states between 2012 and 2017. Poisson regression analysis was used to examine the rate of oral steroid prescription overall and by ethnicity controlling for potential confounders. Among Latino children, those who were always overweight/obese at study visits had a 15% higher rate of receiving an oral steroid prescription than those who were never overweight/obese [rate ratio (RR) = 1.15, 95% CI 1.05-1.26]. A similar effect size was observed for non-Hispanic white children, though the relationship was not statistically significant (RR = 1.10, 95% CI: 0.92-1.33). The interactions between body mass index and ethnicity were not significant (sometimes overweight/obese = 0.95, always overweight/obese = 0.58), suggesting a lack of disparities in the association between obesity and oral steroid prescription by ethnicity. Children with obesity received more oral steroid prescriptions than those at a healthy weight, which may be indicative of worse asthma control. We did not observe significant ethnic disparities.
合并哮喘和肥胖导致更差的哮喘结局,部分原因是对控制药物的反应降低。随之而来的可能是口服类固醇处方增加,这是哮喘控制不佳的标志。对于拉丁裔儿童,人们对此现象知之甚少。我们的目的是确定肥胖是否与哮喘儿童口服类固醇处方的增加有关,并评估拉丁裔和非西班牙裔白种儿童在这些关联中是否存在差异。我们检查了 ADVANCE 国家社区卫生中心网络的电子健康记录数据。该样本包括 16763 名年龄在 5-17 岁之间的儿童,他们在 2012 年至 2017 年期间在 ADVANCE 诊所进行了≥1 次门诊就诊,并被诊断患有哮喘。采用泊松回归分析总体和按族裔检查口服类固醇处方的比率,同时控制潜在混杂因素。在拉丁裔儿童中,与从未超重/肥胖的儿童相比,研究期间一直超重/肥胖的儿童接受口服类固醇处方的比率高 15%[调整后比值比 (RR) = 1.15,95%可信区间 (CI) 1.05-1.26]。对于非西班牙裔白种儿童,也观察到了类似的效应大小,但这种关系没有统计学意义 (RR = 1.10,95% CI:0.92-1.33)。体重指数和族裔之间的相互作用不显著 (有时超重/肥胖 = 0.95,一直超重/肥胖 = 0.58),这表明肥胖与口服类固醇处方之间的关联在族裔间没有差异。肥胖儿童比健康体重儿童接受更多的口服类固醇处方,这可能表明哮喘控制更差。我们没有观察到显著的种族差异。