Han Yueh-Ying, Celedón Juan C
Division of Pulmonary Medicine, Department of Pediatrics, University of Pittsburgh Medical Center (UPMC) Children's Hospital of Pittsburgh, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.
Division of Pulmonary Medicine, Department of Pediatrics, University of Pittsburgh Medical Center (UPMC) Children's Hospital of Pittsburgh, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.
Ann Allergy Asthma Immunol. 2024 Dec;133(6):630-640. doi: 10.1016/j.anai.2024.07.023. Epub 2024 Jul 26.
In the United States, people living in deprived urban areas and persons in certain minoritized groups are often exposed to violence and affected with asthma, and epidemiologic studies have shown a link between exposure to violence (ETV) and asthma throughout the lifespan. Indeed, ETV at the individual, intrafamilial and community levels has been linked to asthma in children and adults. In this review, we discuss the evidence for a causal relation between ETV and asthma, emphasizing findings published in the last five years. Interpretation of the available evidence is limited by variable quality of the assessment of ETV or asthma, potential recall and selection bias, inability to estimate the relative contribution of various types of violence to the observed associations, lack of objective biomarkers of asthma or asthma endotypes, and inconsistent consideration of potential confounders or modifiers of the ETV-asthma link. Despite such limitations, the aggregate evidence from studies conducted in different locations and populations suggests that ETV affects asthma and asthma outcomes, and that this is explained by direct physiologic effects of violence-related distress and indirect effects (e.g., through risky health behaviors or co-morbidities). Thus, large prospective studies with careful assessment of specific types of ETV, key covariates and comorbidities (including mental illness), and asthma are needed to advance this field. Such research efforts should not preclude screening for maltreatment in children with asthma and ETV-related depression and anxiety in adolescents and adults with asthma. Further, vigorous policies are needed to curtail violence, as such policies could benefit patients with asthma while saving lives.
在美国,生活在贫困城市地区的人和某些少数族裔群体经常遭受暴力侵害并患有哮喘,流行病学研究表明,一生中遭受暴力(ETV)与哮喘之间存在关联。事实上,个体、家庭内部和社区层面的ETV与儿童和成人的哮喘有关。在本综述中,我们讨论了ETV与哮喘之间因果关系的证据,重点强调过去五年发表的研究结果。现有证据的解释受到以下因素的限制:ETV或哮喘评估质量参差不齐、潜在的回忆和选择偏倚、无法估计各类暴力对观察到的关联的相对贡献、缺乏哮喘或哮喘内型的客观生物标志物,以及对ETV与哮喘关联的潜在混杂因素或调节因素的考虑不一致。尽管存在这些局限性,但在不同地点和人群中进行的研究的总体证据表明,ETV会影响哮喘及其转归,这可以通过暴力相关困扰的直接生理效应和间接效应(例如,通过危险的健康行为或合并症)来解释。因此,需要进行大型前瞻性研究,仔细评估特定类型的ETV、关键协变量和合并症(包括精神疾病)以及哮喘,以推动该领域的发展。此类研究工作不应排除对哮喘儿童的虐待筛查,以及对患有哮喘的青少年和成人中与ETV相关的抑郁和焦虑的筛查。此外,需要有力的政策来减少暴力,因为此类政策既能使哮喘患者受益,又能挽救生命。