Characterization of wheezing phenotypes in the first 10 years of life
Characterization of wheezing phenotypes in the first 10 years of life
Background: Childhood wheezing illnesses are characterized into different phenotypes. However, severity of the disease associated with these phenotypes has not been extensively studied.
Objectives: To determine characteristics of childhood wheezing phenotypes in the first decade of life using health outcomes plus measurements of atopy, lung function and bronchial hyper-responsiveness.
Methods: A whole population birth cohort (n = 1456) was prospectively studied to examine the natural history of childhood wheezing. Children were seen at 1, 2, 4 and 10 years for questionnaire completion and prospectively collected data used to define wheezing phenotypes. Assessment was made of adverse health outcomes plus spirometry, bronchial hyper-responsiveness, serum IgE measurement at 10 years and skin test sensitization at both 4 and 10 years for wheezing phenotypes.
Results: Phenotypic analysis identified that 37% early life wheezers (symptom onset by age 4 years) still wheezed at 10 years. These persistent wheezers showed significantly more physician-diagnosed asthma in early life (P < 0.005 at 2 years) than early transient wheezers (wheezing transiently with onset by age 4 years). Overall they experienced greater multiple hospital admissions (P = 0.024), specialist referral (P = 0.009) and use of inhaled (P < 0.001) and oral steroids (P < 0.001) than early transient wheezers. They also demonstrated enhanced bronchial hyper-responsiveness compared with early transient wheezers (P < 0.001). However, both groups of early life wheezers showed impairment of baseline lung function at 10 years in comparison with non-wheezers: FEV1 (P < 0.029) and FEV1/FVC ratio (P < 0.001) with persistent wheeze and PEF (P = 0.036) with early transient wheeze. Late-onset wheezers (onset from 5 years onwards) had similar BHR to persistent wheezers but maintained normal lung function at age 10 and had lower cumulative prevalence of adverse health outcomes than persistent wheezers.
Conclusions: Persistent wheezing with early childhood onset is associated with substantial morbidity in the first decade of life in association with high levels of atopy, bronchial hyper-responsiveness and impaired lung function at 10 years of age. Late-onset wheezing in the first decade of life could harbour potential for similarly significant disease subsequently.
573-578
Kurukulaaratchy, R.J.
e2b0d8fd-4e6b-46bc-8931-9cbda7707f54
Fenn, M.H.
0972b9f7-6f15-49f8-b468-165353456524
Waterhouse, L.M.
883f13bf-b63c-4fd2-9818-8afe4462526a
Matthews, S.M.
d1447741-8267-48ee-a12a-5aa353e6aa77
Holgate, S.T.
2e7c17a9-6796-436e-8772-1fe6d2ac5edc
Arshad, S.H.
a4f4484e-6458-4868-aa10-fcc5ecc91ce1
May 2003
Kurukulaaratchy, R.J.
e2b0d8fd-4e6b-46bc-8931-9cbda7707f54
Fenn, M.H.
0972b9f7-6f15-49f8-b468-165353456524
Waterhouse, L.M.
883f13bf-b63c-4fd2-9818-8afe4462526a
Matthews, S.M.
d1447741-8267-48ee-a12a-5aa353e6aa77
Holgate, S.T.
2e7c17a9-6796-436e-8772-1fe6d2ac5edc
Arshad, S.H.
a4f4484e-6458-4868-aa10-fcc5ecc91ce1
Kurukulaaratchy, R.J., Fenn, M.H., Waterhouse, L.M., Matthews, S.M., Holgate, S.T. and Arshad, S.H.
(2003)
Characterization of wheezing phenotypes in the first 10 years of life.
Clinical & Experimental Allergy, 33 (5), .
(doi:10.1046/j.1365-2222.2003.01657.x).
Abstract
Background: Childhood wheezing illnesses are characterized into different phenotypes. However, severity of the disease associated with these phenotypes has not been extensively studied.
Objectives: To determine characteristics of childhood wheezing phenotypes in the first decade of life using health outcomes plus measurements of atopy, lung function and bronchial hyper-responsiveness.
Methods: A whole population birth cohort (n = 1456) was prospectively studied to examine the natural history of childhood wheezing. Children were seen at 1, 2, 4 and 10 years for questionnaire completion and prospectively collected data used to define wheezing phenotypes. Assessment was made of adverse health outcomes plus spirometry, bronchial hyper-responsiveness, serum IgE measurement at 10 years and skin test sensitization at both 4 and 10 years for wheezing phenotypes.
Results: Phenotypic analysis identified that 37% early life wheezers (symptom onset by age 4 years) still wheezed at 10 years. These persistent wheezers showed significantly more physician-diagnosed asthma in early life (P < 0.005 at 2 years) than early transient wheezers (wheezing transiently with onset by age 4 years). Overall they experienced greater multiple hospital admissions (P = 0.024), specialist referral (P = 0.009) and use of inhaled (P < 0.001) and oral steroids (P < 0.001) than early transient wheezers. They also demonstrated enhanced bronchial hyper-responsiveness compared with early transient wheezers (P < 0.001). However, both groups of early life wheezers showed impairment of baseline lung function at 10 years in comparison with non-wheezers: FEV1 (P < 0.029) and FEV1/FVC ratio (P < 0.001) with persistent wheeze and PEF (P = 0.036) with early transient wheeze. Late-onset wheezers (onset from 5 years onwards) had similar BHR to persistent wheezers but maintained normal lung function at age 10 and had lower cumulative prevalence of adverse health outcomes than persistent wheezers.
Conclusions: Persistent wheezing with early childhood onset is associated with substantial morbidity in the first decade of life in association with high levels of atopy, bronchial hyper-responsiveness and impaired lung function at 10 years of age. Late-onset wheezing in the first decade of life could harbour potential for similarly significant disease subsequently.
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Published date: May 2003
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Local EPrints ID: 27216
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/27216
ISSN: 0954-7894
PURE UUID: 6c291fd1-3e4d-42bd-83ae-4cfc999864f6
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Date deposited: 26 Apr 2006
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 07:16
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Author:
R.J. Kurukulaaratchy
Author:
M.H. Fenn
Author:
L.M. Waterhouse
Author:
S.M. Matthews
Author:
S.H. Arshad
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