Environmental tobacco smoke and airway obstruction in children with sickle cell anemia
Environmental tobacco smoke and airway obstruction in children with sickle cell anemia
Background: The contribution of environmental tobacco smoke (ETS) exposure to pulmonary morbidity in children with sickle cell anemia (SCA) is poorly understood. We tested the hypothesis that children with SCA and ETS exposure would have an increased prevalence of obstructive lung disease and respiratory symptoms compared with children with SCA and no ETS exposure. Methods: Parent reports of ETS and respiratory symptom frequency were obtained for 245 children with SCA as part of a multicenter prospective cohort study. One hundred ninety-six children completed pulmonary function testing. Multivariable regression models were used to evaluate the associations between ETS exposure at different time points (prenatal, infant [birth to 2 years], preschool [2 years to first grade], and current) and lung function and respiratory symptoms. Results: Among the 245 participants, a high prevalence of prior (44%) and current (29%) ETS exposure was reported. Of the 196 children who completed pulmonary function testing, those with parent-reported infant and current ETS exposure were more likely to have airway obstruction (defined as an FEV 1/FVC ratio below the lower limit normal) compared with unexposed children (22.0% vs 3.1%, P < .001). Those with ETS exposure also had a lower forced expiratory flow, midexpiratory phase/FVC ratio (0.82 vs 0.97, P = .001) and were more likely to have evidence of bronchodilator responsiveness (23% vs 11%, P = .03). Current and prior ETS exposure and in utero smoke exposure were associated with increased frequency of respiratory symptoms. Conclusions: ETS exposure is associated with evidence of lower airway obstruction and increased respiratory symptoms in SCA.
1323-1329
Cohen, Robyn T.
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Strunk, Robert C.
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Field, Joshua J.
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Rosen, Carol L.
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Kirkham, Fenella J.
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Redline, Susan
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Stocks, Janet
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Rodeghier, Mark J.
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DeBaun, Michael R.
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October 2013
Cohen, Robyn T.
68312680-d8a7-4a08-9e1e-2eff5e924bfe
Strunk, Robert C.
014a33a8-1e21-4ee9-8b32-2cfb453f033d
Field, Joshua J.
f907e24b-55db-42f9-9594-0e66dfed39bc
Rosen, Carol L.
3a8d9aa4-397d-47f6-8791-3df3e42eb1a5
Kirkham, Fenella J.
1dfbc0d5-aebe-4439-9fb2-dac6503bcd58
Redline, Susan
3466f7f2-aa34-4c87-b8f1-37e039f6f0bd
Stocks, Janet
b2cd1933-aa00-483a-b996-74cdd2bfd09e
Rodeghier, Mark J.
f1141bb4-70fb-4ff1-b12a-fb58e7bd8864
DeBaun, Michael R.
76559153-80c6-4642-bdf8-672a75570dfe
Cohen, Robyn T., Strunk, Robert C., Field, Joshua J., Rosen, Carol L., Kirkham, Fenella J., Redline, Susan, Stocks, Janet, Rodeghier, Mark J. and DeBaun, Michael R.
(2013)
Environmental tobacco smoke and airway obstruction in children with sickle cell anemia.
Chest, 144 (4), .
(doi:10.1378/chest.12-1569).
Abstract
Background: The contribution of environmental tobacco smoke (ETS) exposure to pulmonary morbidity in children with sickle cell anemia (SCA) is poorly understood. We tested the hypothesis that children with SCA and ETS exposure would have an increased prevalence of obstructive lung disease and respiratory symptoms compared with children with SCA and no ETS exposure. Methods: Parent reports of ETS and respiratory symptom frequency were obtained for 245 children with SCA as part of a multicenter prospective cohort study. One hundred ninety-six children completed pulmonary function testing. Multivariable regression models were used to evaluate the associations between ETS exposure at different time points (prenatal, infant [birth to 2 years], preschool [2 years to first grade], and current) and lung function and respiratory symptoms. Results: Among the 245 participants, a high prevalence of prior (44%) and current (29%) ETS exposure was reported. Of the 196 children who completed pulmonary function testing, those with parent-reported infant and current ETS exposure were more likely to have airway obstruction (defined as an FEV 1/FVC ratio below the lower limit normal) compared with unexposed children (22.0% vs 3.1%, P < .001). Those with ETS exposure also had a lower forced expiratory flow, midexpiratory phase/FVC ratio (0.82 vs 0.97, P = .001) and were more likely to have evidence of bronchodilator responsiveness (23% vs 11%, P = .03). Current and prior ETS exposure and in utero smoke exposure were associated with increased frequency of respiratory symptoms. Conclusions: ETS exposure is associated with evidence of lower airway obstruction and increased respiratory symptoms in SCA.
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Accepted/In Press date: 15 April 2013
Published date: October 2013
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Local EPrints ID: 424271
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/424271
ISSN: 0012-3692
PURE UUID: 80800bfb-4474-4197-856d-31b5a20ee07b
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Date deposited: 05 Oct 2018 11:35
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 03:22
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Author:
Robyn T. Cohen
Author:
Robert C. Strunk
Author:
Joshua J. Field
Author:
Carol L. Rosen
Author:
Susan Redline
Author:
Janet Stocks
Author:
Mark J. Rodeghier
Author:
Michael R. DeBaun
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