Division of Pediatric Allergy & Immunology, Department of Pediatrics, Kravis Children's Hospital, Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, New York, New York.
Department of Environmental Medicine and Public Health, Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, New York, New York.
Ann Allergy Asthma Immunol. 2021 Nov;127(5):553-561.e3. doi: 10.1016/j.anai.2021.06.012. Epub 2021 Jun 23.
Studies evaluating effects of prenatal polyunsaturated fatty acid (PUFA) intake on childhood asthma reveal mixed results. Inconsistencies may result from not accounting for important modifying factors such as maternal asthma or child sex.
To evaluate whether associations between prenatal PUFA intake and childhood asthma are modified by prenatal active maternal asthma or child sex in 412 mother-child dyads.
Energy-adjusted prenatal dietary and supplement intakes of omega-3 (n-3) and omega-6 (n-6) PUFAs were estimated using the Block98 Food Frequency Questionnaire, administered during pregnancy. Mothers reported asthma in children followed prospectively to 4.0 plus or minus 1.7 years. Generalized additive models with smooth terms for PUFA (n-3, n-6, n-6/n-3 ratio) effects were used to investigate associations between PUFAs and child asthma, without prespecifying the form of these relationships, including effect modification by active maternal asthma or child sex.
Among mothers (40% Black, 31% Hispanic), 22% had active asthma in pregnancy; 17.5% of children developed asthma. Lower maternal n-3 PUFA intake was significantly associated with risk of childhood asthma (P = .03), in particular among children of mothers with active asthma and low n-3 PUFA intake (P = .01). This inverse association was more apparent in girls (P = .01) compared with boys (P = .30), regardless of maternal asthma status. For n-6 PUFA and the n-6/n-3 ratio, there was a lower risk of childhood asthma in the midrange of intake and increased risk at higher intake (n-6 PUFA P = .10, n-6/n-3 ratio P = .13).
Consideration of factors that modify effects of prenatal PUFA intake on childhood asthma has implications for designing intervention strategies tailored to impact those at greatest risk.
评估产前多不饱和脂肪酸(PUFA)摄入对儿童哮喘的影响的研究结果不一。不一致的原因可能是没有考虑到重要的调节因素,如母亲哮喘或儿童性别。
在 412 对母婴对子中,评估产前 PUFA 摄入与儿童哮喘之间的关联是否受产前母亲哮喘或儿童性别变化的影响。
使用孕期进行的 Block98 食物频率问卷,估计能量调整后的产前饮食和补充剂中 ω-3(n-3)和 ω-6(n-6)PUFA 的摄入量。前瞻性随访儿童至 4.0 岁加减 1.7 岁,母亲报告儿童患有哮喘。使用广义加性模型,用平滑项表示 PUFA(n-3、n-6、n-6/n-3 比值)的效应,调查 PUFA 与儿童哮喘之间的关系,而不预先规定这些关系的形式,包括母体哮喘和儿童性别对这些关系的修饰作用。
在母亲中(40%为黑人,31%为西班牙裔),22%在孕期患有哮喘;17.5%的儿童患有哮喘。较低的母体 n-3 PUFA 摄入量与儿童哮喘的风险显著相关(P =.03),尤其是在母亲患有哮喘且 n-3 PUFA 摄入量较低的儿童中(P =.01)。这种负相关在女孩中更为明显(P =.01),而在男孩中则不明显(P =.30),而与母亲哮喘的状况无关。对于 n-6 PUFA 和 n-6/n-3 比值,中等摄入量与较低的儿童哮喘风险相关,高摄入量则与较高的儿童哮喘风险相关(n-6 PUFA P =.10,n-6/n-3 比值 P =.13)。
考虑到调节产前 PUFA 摄入对儿童哮喘影响的因素,对于设计针对高危人群的干预策略具有重要意义。