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Characterisation of asthma that develops during adolescence; findings from the Isle of Wight Birth Cohort

Characterisation of asthma that develops during adolescence; findings from the Isle of Wight Birth Cohort
Characterisation of asthma that develops during adolescence; findings from the Isle of Wight Birth Cohort
Background:
Understanding of adolescent-onset asthma remains limited. We sought to characterise this state and identify associated factors within a longitudinal birth cohort study.

Methods:
The Isle of Wight Whole Population Birth Cohort was recruited in 1989 (N=1456) and characterised at 1, 2, 4, 10 and 18-years. "Adolescent-onset asthma" was defined as asthma at age 18 without prior history of asthma, "persistent-adolescent asthma" as asthma at both 10 and 18 and "never-asthma" as those without asthma at any assessment.

Results:
Adolescent-onset asthma accounted for 28.3% of asthma at 18-years and was of similar severity to persistent-adolescent asthma. Adolescent-onset asthmatics showed elevated bronchial hyper-responsiveness (BHR) and atopy at 10 and 18 years. BHR in this group at 10 was intermediate to that of never-asthmatics and persistent-adolescent asthma. By 18 their BHR, bronchodilator reversibility and sputum eosinophilia was greater than never-asthmatics and comparable to persistent-adolescent asthma. At 10, males who later developed adolescent-onset asthma had reduced FEV(1) and FEF(25-75), while females had normal lung function but then developed impaired FEV(1) and FEF(25-75) in parallel with adolescent asthma. Factors independently associated with adolescent-onset asthma included atopy at 10 (OR=2.35; 95% CI=1.08-5.09), BHR at 10 (3.42; 1.55-7.59), rhinitis at 10 (2.35; 1.11-5.01) and paracetamol use at 18-years (1.10; 1.01-1.19).

Conclusions:
Adolescent-onset asthma is associated with significant morbidity. Predisposing factors are atopy, rhinitis and BHR at age 10 while adolescent paracetamol use is also associated with this state. Awareness of potentially modifiable influences may offer avenues for mitigating this disease state.
329-337
Kurukulaaratchy, Ramesh J.
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Raza, Abid
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Scott, Martha
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Williams, Paula
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Ewart, Susan
28667421-3cf7-43d7-b1c3-ca27564938f7
Matthews, Sharon
da71ceaa-c974-4fda-aea0-13c7cdecaf04
Roberts, Graham
ea00db4e-84e7-4b39-8273-9b71dbd7e2f3
Arshad, S.H.
917e246d-2e60-472f-8d30-94b01ef28958
Kurukulaaratchy, Ramesh J.
9c7b8105-2892-49f2-8775-54d4961e3e74
Raza, Abid
0bcd5946-167e-4e75-9eaf-906e980ee498
Scott, Martha
e4164678-f688-4d10-bc35-b89b4c944ab3
Williams, Paula
5c0a927f-f5c5-4b91-bf52-6b84ab126c0b
Ewart, Susan
28667421-3cf7-43d7-b1c3-ca27564938f7
Matthews, Sharon
da71ceaa-c974-4fda-aea0-13c7cdecaf04
Roberts, Graham
ea00db4e-84e7-4b39-8273-9b71dbd7e2f3
Arshad, S.H.
917e246d-2e60-472f-8d30-94b01ef28958

Kurukulaaratchy, Ramesh J., Raza, Abid, Scott, Martha, Williams, Paula, Ewart, Susan, Matthews, Sharon, Roberts, Graham and Arshad, S.H. (2012) Characterisation of asthma that develops during adolescence; findings from the Isle of Wight Birth Cohort. Respiratory Medicine, 106 (3), 329-337. (doi:10.1016/j.rmed.2011.12.006). (PMID:22212639)

Record type: Article

Abstract

Background:
Understanding of adolescent-onset asthma remains limited. We sought to characterise this state and identify associated factors within a longitudinal birth cohort study.

Methods:
The Isle of Wight Whole Population Birth Cohort was recruited in 1989 (N=1456) and characterised at 1, 2, 4, 10 and 18-years. "Adolescent-onset asthma" was defined as asthma at age 18 without prior history of asthma, "persistent-adolescent asthma" as asthma at both 10 and 18 and "never-asthma" as those without asthma at any assessment.

Results:
Adolescent-onset asthma accounted for 28.3% of asthma at 18-years and was of similar severity to persistent-adolescent asthma. Adolescent-onset asthmatics showed elevated bronchial hyper-responsiveness (BHR) and atopy at 10 and 18 years. BHR in this group at 10 was intermediate to that of never-asthmatics and persistent-adolescent asthma. By 18 their BHR, bronchodilator reversibility and sputum eosinophilia was greater than never-asthmatics and comparable to persistent-adolescent asthma. At 10, males who later developed adolescent-onset asthma had reduced FEV(1) and FEF(25-75), while females had normal lung function but then developed impaired FEV(1) and FEF(25-75) in parallel with adolescent asthma. Factors independently associated with adolescent-onset asthma included atopy at 10 (OR=2.35; 95% CI=1.08-5.09), BHR at 10 (3.42; 1.55-7.59), rhinitis at 10 (2.35; 1.11-5.01) and paracetamol use at 18-years (1.10; 1.01-1.19).

Conclusions:
Adolescent-onset asthma is associated with significant morbidity. Predisposing factors are atopy, rhinitis and BHR at age 10 while adolescent paracetamol use is also associated with this state. Awareness of potentially modifiable influences may offer avenues for mitigating this disease state.

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More information

Published date: March 2012
Organisations: Clinical & Experimental Sciences

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 351107
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/351107
PURE UUID: 33351ddc-bfa7-4579-8e17-6e3d43790a4f
ORCID for Ramesh J. Kurukulaaratchy: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-1588-2400
ORCID for Graham Roberts: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-2252-1248

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Date deposited: 16 Apr 2013 08:25
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 03:22

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Contributors

Author: Abid Raza
Author: Martha Scott
Author: Paula Williams
Author: Susan Ewart
Author: Sharon Matthews
Author: Graham Roberts ORCID iD
Author: S.H. Arshad

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