Lundholm Cecilia, Karim Hanna, Smew Awad I, Silverman Michael, Gong Tong, Brew Bronwyn K, Almqvist Catarina
Department of Medical Epidemiology and Biostatistics, Karolinska Institutet, Stockholm, Sweden.
Paediatric Allergy and Pulmonology Unit, Astrid Lindgren Children's Hospital, Karolinska University Hospital, Stockholm, Sweden.
J Allergy Clin Immunol Glob. 2024 Dec 4;4(1):100380. doi: 10.1016/j.jacig.2024.100380. eCollection 2025 Feb.
Food allergy has been shown to negatively impact children's mental health and quality of life. However, its impact on school performance is unknown.
We aimed to investigate whether food allergy, severe and nonsevere, is associated with school performance when accounting for measured and unmeasured familial factors.
This was a register-based cohort study, with sibling controls, including all children born in Sweden 2001-5 (n = 456,164) with food allergy information based on hospital visits and prescriptions, grades, and national test results from all Swedish schools and confounders. Primary exposure was food allergy severity (none, nonsevere, or severe) in school years 7-9, and the primary outcome was total grades from year 9, with secondary exposures/outcomes also at younger ages. The primary outcome was analyzed by linear regression and, for sibling/twin control analyses, fixed effect linear regression. Results were replicated in a twin cohort (n = 31,609).
In unadjusted and analyses adjusted for measured confounders, children with severe food allergy appeared to have better total grades than children without food allergy (β = 10.6 [95% confidence interval (CI), 8.6, 12.6] and β = 5.5 [95% CI, 3.7, 7.4]). When also adjusting for unmeasured confounders shared by siblings, the difference was close to null and statistically nonsignificant (β = 1.6 [95% CI, -1.5, 4.7]; for nonsevere food allergy, β = -0.0 [95% CI, -2.2, 2.1]). The twin cohort results were similar.
We found no consistent evidence of a negative effect of food allergy, either severe or nonsevere, on school performance when adjusting for measured and unmeasured confounders shared by siblings.
食物过敏已被证明会对儿童的心理健康和生活质量产生负面影响。然而,其对学业成绩的影响尚不清楚。
我们旨在调查在考虑已测量和未测量的家庭因素时,严重和非严重食物过敏是否与学业成绩相关。
这是一项基于登记的队列研究,有同胞对照,包括2001 - 2005年在瑞典出生的所有儿童(n = 456,164),其食物过敏信息基于医院就诊和处方、成绩以及瑞典所有学校的全国测试结果和混杂因素。主要暴露因素是7 - 9学年的食物过敏严重程度(无、非严重或严重),主要结局是9年级的总成绩,次要暴露/结局也涉及更小年龄。主要结局通过线性回归分析,对于同胞/双胞胎对照分析,采用固定效应线性回归。结果在一个双胞胎队列(n = 31,609)中进行了重复验证。
在未调整和调整了已测量混杂因素的分析中,患有严重食物过敏的儿童似乎比没有食物过敏的儿童总成绩更好(β = 10.6 [95%置信区间(CI),8.6,12.6]和β = 5.5 [95% CI,3.7,7.4])。当同时调整同胞共享的未测量混杂因素时,差异接近零且无统计学意义(β = 1.6 [95% CI, - 1.5,4.7];对于非严重食物过敏,β = - 0.0 [95% CI, - 2.2,2.1])。双胞胎队列的结果相似。
在调整同胞共享已测量和未测量的混杂因素后,我们没有发现严重或非严重食物过敏对学业成绩产生负面影响的一致证据。