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Atopic dermatitis and the hygiene hypothesis: a case-control study

Atopic dermatitis and the hygiene hypothesis: a case-control study
Atopic dermatitis and the hygiene hypothesis: a case-control study
Background The notion that lack of exposure to infection in early life leads to development of atopic disease has come to be known as the hygiene hypothesis. It has arisen from observations of the rapidly rising prevalence of atopic diseases in recent decades and the lower prevalence of atopy with rising birth order. Direct evidence for the hypothesis to date is inconsistent.
Methods A case-control study set in Norfolk, UK of 602 children aged 1–5 years. Cases and controls were defined using the UK Diagnostic Criteria for atopic dermatitis (AD) and a range of direct and indirect methods were used to measure exposure to infection during infancy. Odds ratios (OR) for the effect of these measures were calculated using logistic regression with adjustment for possible biological and social confounding factors.
Results Reduced odds of AD were associated with rising birth order (OR for one older sibling 0.59, 95% CI: 0.42, 0.84 and for 2 older siblings 0.49, 95% CI: 0.31, 0.77). None of the measures of infection reduced the odds of AD significantly, either in the unadjusted or adjusted analyses. None of the measures of infection explained the protective effect of older siblings.
Conclusions Increased exposure to infection does not explain the reduced risk of AD in second and subsequent siblings. More generally, these data cast doubt on the hygiene hypothesis as a causal explanation for AD in young children.
Atopic dermatitis, eczema, hygiene hypothesis, infection
0300-5771
199-207
Gibbs, S.
dabedf41-f0e1-4ee2-99cf-bc806f78b811
Surridge, H.
a1fa7bbf-df5f-455d-b283-f0e3878cfe08
Adamson, R.
5c93135a-0a07-48c1-b240-4c00e0f5cf39
Cohen, B.
635ec609-cc04-40ea-a635-386e0c4fcfe7
Bentham, G.
6178565d-5d68-4de1-a61f-dd02653d72bd
Reading, R.
60d7b4f1-7e5f-4c2a-97f2-1d897e876d6b
Gibbs, S.
dabedf41-f0e1-4ee2-99cf-bc806f78b811
Surridge, H.
a1fa7bbf-df5f-455d-b283-f0e3878cfe08
Adamson, R.
5c93135a-0a07-48c1-b240-4c00e0f5cf39
Cohen, B.
635ec609-cc04-40ea-a635-386e0c4fcfe7
Bentham, G.
6178565d-5d68-4de1-a61f-dd02653d72bd
Reading, R.
60d7b4f1-7e5f-4c2a-97f2-1d897e876d6b

Gibbs, S., Surridge, H., Adamson, R., Cohen, B., Bentham, G. and Reading, R. (2004) Atopic dermatitis and the hygiene hypothesis: a case-control study. International Journal of Epidemiology, 33 (1), 199-207.

Record type: Article

Abstract

Background The notion that lack of exposure to infection in early life leads to development of atopic disease has come to be known as the hygiene hypothesis. It has arisen from observations of the rapidly rising prevalence of atopic diseases in recent decades and the lower prevalence of atopy with rising birth order. Direct evidence for the hypothesis to date is inconsistent.
Methods A case-control study set in Norfolk, UK of 602 children aged 1–5 years. Cases and controls were defined using the UK Diagnostic Criteria for atopic dermatitis (AD) and a range of direct and indirect methods were used to measure exposure to infection during infancy. Odds ratios (OR) for the effect of these measures were calculated using logistic regression with adjustment for possible biological and social confounding factors.
Results Reduced odds of AD were associated with rising birth order (OR for one older sibling 0.59, 95% CI: 0.42, 0.84 and for 2 older siblings 0.49, 95% CI: 0.31, 0.77). None of the measures of infection reduced the odds of AD significantly, either in the unadjusted or adjusted analyses. None of the measures of infection explained the protective effect of older siblings.
Conclusions Increased exposure to infection does not explain the reduced risk of AD in second and subsequent siblings. More generally, these data cast doubt on the hygiene hypothesis as a causal explanation for AD in young children.

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More information

Published date: 2004
Keywords: Atopic dermatitis, eczema, hygiene hypothesis, infection

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 9222
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/9222
ISSN: 0300-5771
PURE UUID: e08cc06d-d650-402a-bca6-76b84bf1cc84

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Date deposited: 07 Oct 2004
Last modified: 08 Jan 2022 18:46

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Contributors

Author: S. Gibbs
Author: H. Surridge
Author: R. Adamson
Author: B. Cohen
Author: G. Bentham
Author: R. Reading

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