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IL13 gene polymorphisms modify the effect of exposure to tobacco smoke on persistent wheeze and asthma of childhood, a longitudinal study

IL13 gene polymorphisms modify the effect of exposure to tobacco smoke on persistent wheeze and asthma of childhood, a longitudinal study
IL13 gene polymorphisms modify the effect of exposure to tobacco smoke on persistent wheeze and asthma of childhood, a longitudinal study
Background: Tobacco smoke and genetic susceptibility are risk factors for asthma and wheezing. The aim of this study was to investigate whether there is a combined effect of interleukin-13 gene (IL13) polymorphisms and tobacco smoke on persistent childhood wheezing and asthma.

Methods: In the Isle of Wight birth cohort (UK, 1989–1999), five IL13 single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs): rs1800925 (-1112C/T), rs2066960, rs1295686, rs20541 (R130Q) and rs1295685 were genotyped. Parents were asked whether their children had wheezed in the last 12 months at ages 1, 2, 4 and 10 years. Children who reported wheeze in the first 4 years of life and also had wheezing at age 10 were classified as early-onset persistent wheeze phenotype; non-wheezers never wheezed up to age 10. Persistent asthma was defined as having a diagnosis of asthma both during the first four years of life and at age 10. Logistic regression methods were used to analyze data on 791 children with complete information. Potential confounders were gender, birth weight, duration of breast feeding, and household cat or dog present during pregnancy.

Results: Maternal smoking during pregnancy was associated with early-onset persistent wheeze (OR 2.93, p < 0.0001); polymorphisms in IL13 were not (OR 1.15, p = 0.60 for the common haplotype pair). However, the effect of maternal smoking during pregnancy was stronger in children with the common IL13 haplotype pair compared to those without it (OR 5.58 and OR 1.29, respectively; p for interaction = 0.014). Single SNP analysis revealed a similar statistical significance for rs20541 (p for interaction = 0.02). Comparable results were observed for persistent childhood asthma (p for interaction = 0.03).

Conclusion: This is the first report that shows a combined effect of in utero exposure to smoking and IL13 on asthma phenotypes in childhood. The results emphasize that genetic studies need to take environmental exposures into account, since they may explain contradictory findings.
1465-9921
[10pp.]
Sadeghnejad, Alireza
e2b0fa73-429f-4818-9f24-127f36c57752
Karmaus, Wilfried
281d0e53-6b5d-4d38-9732-3981b07cd853
Arshad, S. Hasan
917e246d-2e60-472f-8d30-94b01ef28958
Kurukulaaratchy, Ramesh
9c7b8105-2892-49f2-8775-54d4961e3e74
Huebner, Marianne
d0086bbf-3f9b-471c-878b-7706f3940038
Ewart, Susan
28667421-3cf7-43d7-b1c3-ca27564938f7
Sadeghnejad, Alireza
e2b0fa73-429f-4818-9f24-127f36c57752
Karmaus, Wilfried
281d0e53-6b5d-4d38-9732-3981b07cd853
Arshad, S. Hasan
917e246d-2e60-472f-8d30-94b01ef28958
Kurukulaaratchy, Ramesh
9c7b8105-2892-49f2-8775-54d4961e3e74
Huebner, Marianne
d0086bbf-3f9b-471c-878b-7706f3940038
Ewart, Susan
28667421-3cf7-43d7-b1c3-ca27564938f7

Sadeghnejad, Alireza, Karmaus, Wilfried, Arshad, S. Hasan, Kurukulaaratchy, Ramesh, Huebner, Marianne and Ewart, Susan (2008) IL13 gene polymorphisms modify the effect of exposure to tobacco smoke on persistent wheeze and asthma of childhood, a longitudinal study. Respiratory Research, 9 (2), [10pp.]. (doi:10.1186/1465-9921-9-2). (PMID:18186920)

Record type: Article

Abstract

Background: Tobacco smoke and genetic susceptibility are risk factors for asthma and wheezing. The aim of this study was to investigate whether there is a combined effect of interleukin-13 gene (IL13) polymorphisms and tobacco smoke on persistent childhood wheezing and asthma.

Methods: In the Isle of Wight birth cohort (UK, 1989–1999), five IL13 single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs): rs1800925 (-1112C/T), rs2066960, rs1295686, rs20541 (R130Q) and rs1295685 were genotyped. Parents were asked whether their children had wheezed in the last 12 months at ages 1, 2, 4 and 10 years. Children who reported wheeze in the first 4 years of life and also had wheezing at age 10 were classified as early-onset persistent wheeze phenotype; non-wheezers never wheezed up to age 10. Persistent asthma was defined as having a diagnosis of asthma both during the first four years of life and at age 10. Logistic regression methods were used to analyze data on 791 children with complete information. Potential confounders were gender, birth weight, duration of breast feeding, and household cat or dog present during pregnancy.

Results: Maternal smoking during pregnancy was associated with early-onset persistent wheeze (OR 2.93, p < 0.0001); polymorphisms in IL13 were not (OR 1.15, p = 0.60 for the common haplotype pair). However, the effect of maternal smoking during pregnancy was stronger in children with the common IL13 haplotype pair compared to those without it (OR 5.58 and OR 1.29, respectively; p for interaction = 0.014). Single SNP analysis revealed a similar statistical significance for rs20541 (p for interaction = 0.02). Comparable results were observed for persistent childhood asthma (p for interaction = 0.03).

Conclusion: This is the first report that shows a combined effect of in utero exposure to smoking and IL13 on asthma phenotypes in childhood. The results emphasize that genetic studies need to take environmental exposures into account, since they may explain contradictory findings.

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More information

e-pub ahead of print date: 10 January 2008
Published date: 10 January 2008
Organisations: Clinical & Experimental Sciences

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 351047
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/351047
ISSN: 1465-9921
PURE UUID: a0232b86-cf70-411a-bb14-edb2227a8d75
ORCID for Ramesh Kurukulaaratchy: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-1588-2400

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Date deposited: 15 Apr 2013 10:46
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 03:02

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Contributors

Author: Alireza Sadeghnejad
Author: Wilfried Karmaus
Author: S. Hasan Arshad
Author: Marianne Huebner
Author: Susan Ewart

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