Systemic inflammation and lung function in adulthood and their association with early life factors
Systemic inflammation and lung function in adulthood and their association with early life factors
Introduction: forced vital capacity (FVC) is a more powerful predictor of mortality than the ratio of forced expiratory volume in one second to FVC (Burney et al. Thorax 2011;66:49-54). Reduced FVC is associated with low birth weight (BW) and low grade inflammation and low BW is also associated with low grade inflammation. BW could therefore explain the association between FVC and inflammation. We tested this hypothesis in the Northern Finland 1966 birth cohort by examining the associations between FVC, systemic inflammation and BW.
Methods: using linear regression we examined the association between FVC and BW and whether adjusting for early life factors (ELF) such as maternal smoking, maternal height and weight before pregnancy explain this association. We then used linear regression to determine the association between FVC and inflammatory markers and whether adjusting for BW and other ELF accounted for the association between FVC and inflammatory markers.
Results: FVC in adulthood increased by 92mL (95% confidence interval (CI): 56 to 130) for each kilogram increase in BW. Adjusting for ELF did not substantially change this association. As BW rose levels of C-reactive protein (CRP) and white blood cell count (WBC) in adulthood fell. One standard deviation (SD) increase of CRP was associated with a 53 mL reduction in FVC (95% CI: -71 to -35) and one SD increase of WBC was associated with a 24 mL reduction in FVC (95% CI: -42 to -5.8). Adjusting for BW did not substantially alter the associations between FVC and CRP or WBC.
Conclusions: FVC is independently associated with birth weight, CRP and WBC. However the association of FVC with CRP or WBC is not explained by variation in BW.
4865
Saad, Neil J.
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Kaakinen, Marika
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Couto Alves, Alexessander Da Silva
87b9179e-abde-4ca5-abfc-4b7c5ac8b03b
Jarvelin, Marjo-Ritta
693bfe10-47a0-4b6f-8cf2-fcb8f764e137
Burney, Peter G.J.
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Saad, Neil J.
2c87bbbc-f874-4cbd-8141-88968e5173c7
Kaakinen, Marika
25c15795-fcf9-43df-ad64-e29cb9107985
Couto Alves, Alexessander Da Silva
87b9179e-abde-4ca5-abfc-4b7c5ac8b03b
Jarvelin, Marjo-Ritta
693bfe10-47a0-4b6f-8cf2-fcb8f764e137
Burney, Peter G.J.
69bf191b-2c30-4a87-94e5-a30066732d40
Saad, Neil J., Kaakinen, Marika, Couto Alves, Alexessander Da Silva, Jarvelin, Marjo-Ritta and Burney, Peter G.J.
(2014)
Systemic inflammation and lung function in adulthood and their association with early life factors.
European Respiratory Journal, 42 (Suppl. 57), .
(doi:10.1183/13993003/erj.42.Suppl_57.4865).
Record type:
Meeting abstract
Abstract
Introduction: forced vital capacity (FVC) is a more powerful predictor of mortality than the ratio of forced expiratory volume in one second to FVC (Burney et al. Thorax 2011;66:49-54). Reduced FVC is associated with low birth weight (BW) and low grade inflammation and low BW is also associated with low grade inflammation. BW could therefore explain the association between FVC and inflammation. We tested this hypothesis in the Northern Finland 1966 birth cohort by examining the associations between FVC, systemic inflammation and BW.
Methods: using linear regression we examined the association between FVC and BW and whether adjusting for early life factors (ELF) such as maternal smoking, maternal height and weight before pregnancy explain this association. We then used linear regression to determine the association between FVC and inflammatory markers and whether adjusting for BW and other ELF accounted for the association between FVC and inflammatory markers.
Results: FVC in adulthood increased by 92mL (95% confidence interval (CI): 56 to 130) for each kilogram increase in BW. Adjusting for ELF did not substantially change this association. As BW rose levels of C-reactive protein (CRP) and white blood cell count (WBC) in adulthood fell. One standard deviation (SD) increase of CRP was associated with a 53 mL reduction in FVC (95% CI: -71 to -35) and one SD increase of WBC was associated with a 24 mL reduction in FVC (95% CI: -42 to -5.8). Adjusting for BW did not substantially alter the associations between FVC and CRP or WBC.
Conclusions: FVC is independently associated with birth weight, CRP and WBC. However the association of FVC with CRP or WBC is not explained by variation in BW.
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Systemic inflammation and lung function in adulthood and their association with early life factors
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e-pub ahead of print date: 25 July 2014
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Local EPrints ID: 509804
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/509804
ISSN: 0903-1936
PURE UUID: d2db04be-910d-44ff-85bc-859d9fbc415a
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Date deposited: 05 Mar 2026 23:12
Last modified: 06 Mar 2026 03:30
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Contributors
Author:
Neil J. Saad
Author:
Marika Kaakinen
Author:
Alexessander Da Silva Couto Alves
Author:
Marjo-Ritta Jarvelin
Author:
Peter G.J. Burney
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