Gaietto Kristina, Han Yueh-Ying, Forno Erick, Bacharier Leonard B, Phipatanakul Wanda, Guilbert Theresa W, Cabana Michael D, Ross Kristie, Blatter Joshua, Acosta-Pérez Edna, Miller Gregory E, de la Hoz Rafael E, Rosser Franziska J, Durrani Sandy, Canino Glorisa, Wisniewski Stephen R, Celedón Juan C
Division of Pulmonary Medicine, Dept of Pediatrics, UPMC Children's Hospital of Pittsburgh, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, PA, USA.
K. Gaietto and Y-Y. Han are shared first authors.
Eur Respir J. 2022 May 12;59(5). doi: 10.1183/13993003.02329-2021. Print 2022 May.
Exposure to violence has been associated with lower lung function in cross-sectional studies.
We examined whether increasing violence-related distress over time is associated with worse lung function and worse asthma control or quality of life in a secondary analysis of a 48-week randomised clinical trial in 98 youth with asthma (aged 9-16 years) treated with low-dose inhaled corticosteroids (Vitamin D Kids Asthma Study (VDKA)). We then replicated our findings for lung function in a prospective study of 232 Puerto Rican youth followed for an average of 5.4 years. Violence-related distress was assessed using the Checklist of Children's Distress Symptoms (CCDS) scale. Our outcomes of interest were percent predicted lung function measures and (in VDKA only) asthma control (assessed using the Asthma Control Test) and asthma-related quality of life (assessed using the Pediatric Asthma Quality of Life Questionnaire (PAQLQ)).
In a multivariable analysis in VDKA, each 1-point increment in CCDS score was associated with decrements of 3.27% in forced expiratory volume in 1 s (FEV) % pred (95% CI -6.44- -0.22%; p=0.04), 2.65% in forced vital capacity (FVC) % pred (95% CI -4.86- -0.45%; p=0.02) and 0.30 points in the overall PAQLQ score (95% CI -0.50- -0.10 points; p<0.01). Similar findings for FEV and FVC were obtained in the prospective study of Puerto Rican youth.
Our findings suggest that violence-related distress may worsen lung function and quality of life in youth with asthma (even those treated with low-dose inhaled corticosteroids), and further support policies to reduce exposure to violence among children in the USA and Puerto Rico.
在横断面研究中,接触暴力与肺功能降低有关。
在一项针对98名患有哮喘的青少年(9 - 16岁)进行的为期48周的随机临床试验(维生素D儿童哮喘研究(VDKA))的二次分析中,我们研究了随时间推移与暴力相关的痛苦增加是否与更差的肺功能、更差的哮喘控制或生活质量相关。然后,我们在一项对232名波多黎各青少年进行的前瞻性研究中重复了我们关于肺功能的发现,该研究平均随访了5.4年。使用儿童痛苦症状清单(CCDS)量表评估与暴力相关的痛苦。我们感兴趣的结果是预测肺功能测量的百分比以及(仅在VDKA中)哮喘控制(使用哮喘控制测试评估)和哮喘相关生活质量(使用儿童哮喘生活质量问卷(PAQLQ)评估)。
在VDKA的多变量分析中,CCDS评分每增加1分,第1秒用力呼气量(FEV)预测值百分比下降3.27%(95%CI -6.44 - -0.22%;p = 0.04),用力肺活量(FVC)预测值百分比下降2.65%(95%CI -4.86 - -0.45%;p = 0.02),PAQLQ总分下降0.30分(95%CI -0.50 - -0.10分;p < 0.01)。在波多黎各青少年的前瞻性研究中获得了关于FEV和FVC的类似结果。
我们的研究结果表明,与暴力相关的痛苦可能会使患有哮喘的青少年(即使是那些使用低剂量吸入糖皮质激素治疗的青少年)的肺功能和生活质量恶化,并进一步支持美国和波多黎各减少儿童接触暴力的政策。