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Pathways through which asthma risk factors contribute to asthma severity in inner-city children

Authors :
Peter J. Gergen
Andrew H. Liu
Rebecca S. Gruchalla
George T. O'Connor
Rebecca Z. Krouse
William W. Busse
Melanie M. Makhija
Edward M. Zoratti
James E. Gern
Robert A. Wood
Steven M. Sigelman
Stephen J. Teach
Carolyn M. Kercsmar
Cynthia M. Visness
Alkis Togias
Jacqueline A. Pongracic
Meyer Kattan
Dinesh K. Pillai
Denise C. Babineau
Gurjit K. Khurana Hershey
Carin I. Lamm
Source :
Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology. 138:1042-1050
Publication Year :
2016
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2016.

Abstract

Background Pathway analyses can be used to determine how host and environmental factors contribute to asthma severity. Objective To investigate pathways explaining asthma severity in inner-city children. Methods On the basis of medical evidence in the published literature, we developed a conceptual model to describe how 8 risk-factor domains (allergen sensitization, allergic inflammation, pulmonary physiology, stress, obesity, vitamin D, environmental tobacco smoke [ETS] exposure, and rhinitis severity) are linked to asthma severity. To estimate the relative magnitude and significance of hypothesized relationships among these domains and asthma severity, we applied a causal network analysis to test our model in an Inner-City Asthma Consortium study. Participants comprised 6- to 17-year-old children (n = 561) with asthma and rhinitis from 9 US inner cities who were evaluated every 2 months for 1 year. Asthma severity was measured by a longitudinal composite assessment of day and night symptoms, exacerbations, and controller usage. Results Our conceptual model explained 53.4% of the variance in asthma severity. An allergy pathway (linking allergen sensitization, allergic inflammation, pulmonary physiology, and rhinitis severity domains to asthma severity) and the ETS exposure pathway (linking ETS exposure and pulmonary physiology domains to asthma severity) exerted significant effects on asthma severity. Among the domains, pulmonary physiology and rhinitis severity had the largest significant standardized total effects on asthma severity (−0.51 and 0.48, respectively), followed by ETS exposure (0.30) and allergic inflammation (0.22). Although vitamin D had modest but significant indirect effects on asthma severity, its total effect was insignificant (0.01). Conclusions The standardized effect sizes generated by a causal network analysis quantify the relative contributions of different domains and can be used to prioritize interventions to address asthma severity.

Details

ISSN :
00916749
Volume :
138
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....0b33e88f1bc3b3951f64496737e30ba4