Docherty Ronan, Gill Miriam, Shankar Shruthi, Turner Stephen, Dick Smita
Child Health, University of Aberdeen, Aberdeen, UK.
Child Health, University Hospitals Birmingham NHS Foundation Trust, Birmingham, UK.
BMJ Open. 2025 Aug 31;15(8):e091855. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2024-091855.
To update our previous systematic review of the literature and describe associations published since 2014 between environmental exposure and asthma control and exacerbations in children.
Systematic literature review following the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses guidelines.
The search strategy from our earlier review was used to search the following databases: MEDLINE/OVID (1946-Present), Embase/OVID SP (1980-Present), CINAHL, Cochrane Centre Trials Register (CCTR), Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews and Database of Abstracts of Reviews of Effects (DARE). Searches were carried out on 5 November 2021 and updated on 3 April 2023. Literature published since 2014 until the date of the search was included.
Studies that examined the association between environmental exposures and asthma exacerbations in children. Study participants were children with a mean age of ≤9 years. Outcomes of interest were indices of asthma symptoms, control and exacerbations. We included systematic reviews, intervention studies, time series and time-stratified case crossover studies and longitudinal cohort studies.
Four researchers independently screened full text articles in English for inclusion and assessed them for quality using the Effective Public Health Practice Project Quality assessment tool. A meta-analysis was carried out for a subgroup of selected papers.
There were 20 339 papers screened and 110 were eligible, including 23 rated strong, 81 rated medium and 6 low quality. There were 17 systematic reviews and 7 randomised controlled trials (RCTs). In most observational studies, exposure to exhaled tobacco smoke or respiratory virus and increasing exposures to outdoor air pollutants (including particulate matter, nitrogen dioxide, traffic-related air pollution and dust storms), fungal spores or tree pollen were associated with increased risk of worsening asthma outcomes. RCTs to reduce indoor air exposures were done in small populations and, although often able to reduce exposures, only one intervention changed asthma outcomes.
The number of eligible papers has increased to 110 from 27 described in our 2014 review, and the quality of papers has also increased. While associations between exposures and worsening outcomes are increasingly consistent, what remains unclear is whether interventions, particularly for indoor air and diet, may improve outcomes.
CRD42021290184.
更新我们之前对文献的系统评价,并描述2014年以来发表的环境暴露与儿童哮喘控制及发作之间的关联。
遵循系统评价和Meta分析的首选报告项目指南进行系统文献评价。
使用我们早期评价中的检索策略检索以下数据库:MEDLINE/OVID(1946年至今)、Embase/OVID SP(1980年至今)、CINAHL、Cochrane中心试验注册库(CCTR)、Cochrane系统评价数据库和效果评价摘要数据库(DARE)。检索于2021年11月5日进行,并于2023年4月3日更新。纳入2014年至检索日期发表的文献。
研究环境暴露与儿童哮喘发作之间关联的研究。研究参与者为平均年龄≤9岁的儿童。感兴趣的结局为哮喘症状、控制和发作的指标。我们纳入了系统评价、干预研究、时间序列和时间分层病例交叉研究以及纵向队列研究。
四名研究人员独立筛选英文全文文章以确定是否纳入,并使用有效公共卫生实践项目质量评估工具评估其质量。对部分选定论文进行了Meta分析。
共筛选20339篇论文,110篇符合纳入标准,其中23篇质量高,81篇质量中等,6篇质量低。有17篇系统评价和7项随机对照试验(RCT)。在大多数观察性研究中,接触呼出的烟草烟雾或呼吸道病毒以及室外空气污染物(包括颗粒物、二氧化氮、交通相关空气污染和沙尘暴)、真菌孢子或花粉暴露增加与哮喘结局恶化风险增加相关。减少室内空气暴露的RCT在小样本中进行,虽然通常能够减少暴露,但只有一项干预改变了哮喘结局。
符合纳入标准的论文数量从我们2014年评价中描述的27篇增加到了110篇,论文质量也有所提高。虽然暴露与不良结局之间的关联越来越一致,但尚不清楚干预措施,特别是针对室内空气和饮食的干预措施是否能改善结局。
PROSPERO注册号:CRD42021290184。