Adult outcomes of childhood wheezing phenotypes are associated with early-life factors
Adult outcomes of childhood wheezing phenotypes are associated with early-life factors
Introduction: while the phenotypic diversity of childhood wheezing is well described, the subsequent life course of such phenotypes and their adult outcomes remain poorly understood. We hypothesized that different childhood wheezing phenotypes have varying longitudinal outcomes at age 26. We sought to identify factors associated with wheezing persistence, clinical remission, and new onset in adulthood.
Methods: participants were seen at birth and at 1, 2, 4, 10, 18, and 26 years in the Isle of Wight Birth Cohort (n = 1456). Information was collected prospectively on wheeze prevalence and phenotypic characteristics at each assessment. Wheeze phenotypes at 10 years were defined as participants wheezing (CW10) or not wheezing at 10 (CNW10). Multivariable regression analyses were undertaken to identify factors associated with wheezing persistence/remission in CW10 and wheeze development in CNW10 at age 26 years.
Results: childhood wheezing phenotypes showed different subsequent outcomes and associated risk factors. Adult wheeze developed in 17.8% of CNW10. Factors independently associated with adult wheeze development in CNW10 included eczema at age 4 years, family history of rhinitis, and parental smoking at birth. Conversely, 56.1% of CW10 had remission of wheeze by 26 years. Factors predicting adult wheezing remission in CW10 included absence of both atopy at age 4 years and family history of rhinitis.
Conclusion: early-life factors influence adult outcomes for childhood wheezing phenotypes, both with respect to later development of adult wheezing in asymptomatic participants and of wheeze remission in childhood wheezers. This suggests potential areas that could be targeted by early-life interventions to alleviate adult disease burden.
Carra, Sophie
19ffdff8-199f-45a6-8782-e99d012b56ee
Zhang, Hongmei
9f774048-54d6-4321-a252-3887b2c76db0
Tanno, Luciana Kase
3f3a9b29-1a71-4c09-b507-5446b05a6c7f
Arshad, Syed Hasan
917e246d-2e60-472f-8d30-94b01ef28958
Kurukulaaratchy, Ramesh J.
9c7b8105-2892-49f2-8775-54d4961e3e74
Carra, Sophie
19ffdff8-199f-45a6-8782-e99d012b56ee
Zhang, Hongmei
9f774048-54d6-4321-a252-3887b2c76db0
Tanno, Luciana Kase
3f3a9b29-1a71-4c09-b507-5446b05a6c7f
Arshad, Syed Hasan
917e246d-2e60-472f-8d30-94b01ef28958
Kurukulaaratchy, Ramesh J.
9c7b8105-2892-49f2-8775-54d4961e3e74
Carra, Sophie, Zhang, Hongmei, Tanno, Luciana Kase, Arshad, Syed Hasan and Kurukulaaratchy, Ramesh J.
(2024)
Adult outcomes of childhood wheezing phenotypes are associated with early-life factors.
Journal of Personalized Medicine, 14.
(doi:10.3390/jpm14121171).
Abstract
Introduction: while the phenotypic diversity of childhood wheezing is well described, the subsequent life course of such phenotypes and their adult outcomes remain poorly understood. We hypothesized that different childhood wheezing phenotypes have varying longitudinal outcomes at age 26. We sought to identify factors associated with wheezing persistence, clinical remission, and new onset in adulthood.
Methods: participants were seen at birth and at 1, 2, 4, 10, 18, and 26 years in the Isle of Wight Birth Cohort (n = 1456). Information was collected prospectively on wheeze prevalence and phenotypic characteristics at each assessment. Wheeze phenotypes at 10 years were defined as participants wheezing (CW10) or not wheezing at 10 (CNW10). Multivariable regression analyses were undertaken to identify factors associated with wheezing persistence/remission in CW10 and wheeze development in CNW10 at age 26 years.
Results: childhood wheezing phenotypes showed different subsequent outcomes and associated risk factors. Adult wheeze developed in 17.8% of CNW10. Factors independently associated with adult wheeze development in CNW10 included eczema at age 4 years, family history of rhinitis, and parental smoking at birth. Conversely, 56.1% of CW10 had remission of wheeze by 26 years. Factors predicting adult wheezing remission in CW10 included absence of both atopy at age 4 years and family history of rhinitis.
Conclusion: early-life factors influence adult outcomes for childhood wheezing phenotypes, both with respect to later development of adult wheezing in asymptomatic participants and of wheeze remission in childhood wheezers. This suggests potential areas that could be targeted by early-life interventions to alleviate adult disease burden.
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FINALMANUSCRIPTJPM Dec 2024
- Accepted Manuscript
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jpm-14-01171-v2
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Accepted/In Press date: 18 December 2024
e-pub ahead of print date: 22 December 2024
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 498958
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/498958
ISSN: 2075-4426
PURE UUID: bfe9d097-7066-4470-a124-7a9945fc107c
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Date deposited: 05 Mar 2025 17:50
Last modified: 06 Mar 2025 02:37
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Author:
Sophie Carra
Author:
Hongmei Zhang
Author:
Luciana Kase Tanno
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