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Evolution of Eczema, Wheeze, and Rhinitis from Infancy to Early Adulthood: Four Birth Cohort Studies
- Source :
- Haider, S, Fontanella, S, Granell, R & Custovic, A 2022, ' Evolution of Eczema, Wheeze and Rhinitis from Infancy to Early Adulthood: Four Birth Cohort Studies ', American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine, vol. 206, no. 8, pp. 950-960 . https://doi.org/10.1164/rccm.202110-2418OC, Am J Respir Crit Care Med, STELAR/UNICORN investigators 2022, ' Evolution of Eczema, Wheeze, and Rhinitis from Infancy to Early Adulthood Four Birth Cohort Studies ', American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine, vol. 206, no. 8, pp. 950-960 . https://doi.org/10.1164/RCCM.202110-2418OC
- Publication Year :
- 2022
- Publisher :
- American Thoracic Society, 2022.
-
Abstract
- Rationale: The relationship between eczema, wheeze or asthma, and rhinitis is complex, and epidemiology and mechanisms of their comorbidities is unclear. Objectives: To investigate within-individual patterns of morbidity of eczema, wheeze, and rhinitis from birth to adolescence/early adulthood. Methods: We investigated onset, progression, and resolution of eczema, wheeze, and rhinitis using descriptive statistics, sequence mining, and latent Markov modeling in four population-based birth cohorts. We used logistic regression to ascertain if early-life eczema or wheeze, or genetic factors (filaggrin [FLG] mutations and 17q21 variants), increase the risk of multimorbidity. Measurements and Main Results: Single conditions, although the most prevalent, were observed significantly less frequently than by chance. There was considerable variation in the timing of onset/remission/persistence/intermittence. Multimorbidity of eczema1wheeze1rhinitis was rare but significantly overrepresented (three to six times more often than by chance). Although infantile eczema was associated with subsequent multimorbidity, most children with eczema (75.4%) did not progress to any multimorbidity pattern. FLG mutations and rs7216389 were not associated with persistence of eczema/wheeze as single conditions, but both increased the risk of multimorbidity (FLG by 2- to 3-fold, rs7216389 risk variant by 1.4- to 1.7-fold). Latent Markov modeling revealed five latent states (no disease/low risk, mainly eczema, mainly wheeze, mainly rhinitis, multimorbidity). The most likely transition to multimorbidity was from eczema state (0.21). However, although this was one of the highest transition probabilities, only one-fifth of those with eczema transitioned to multimorbidity. Conclusions: Atopic diseases fit a multimorbidity framework, with no evidence for sequential atopic march progression. The highest transition to multimorbidity was from eczema, but most children with eczema (more than three-quarters) had no comorbidities.
- Subjects :
- Hypersensitivity, Immediate
Adult
Pulmonary and Respiratory Medicine
Allergy
Adolescent
Respiratory System
Immunology
Eczema
CHILDREN
PHENOTYPES
Critical Care and Intensive Care Medicine
Cohort Studies
Critical Care Medicine
General & Internal Medicine
ATOPIC-DERMATITIS
FILAGGRIN
Humans
EXPOSURE
Child
11 Medical and Health Sciences
Respiratory Sounds
Rhinitis
birth cohorts
Science & Technology
atopic march
Original Articles
ALSPAC
asthma
STELAR/UNICORN investigators
wheeze
ONSET
Birth Cohort
eczema
Disease Susceptibility
COMORBIDITY
Life Sciences & Biomedicine
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 15354970 and 1073449X
- Volume :
- 206
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....9b28ca8985b3ec1823109cfaf0ec6ff9
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.1164/rccm.202110-2418oc