Publication | Closed Access
A Prospective Study of Fel d1 and Der p1 Exposure in Infancy and Childhood Wheezing
102
Citations
28
References
2004
Year
AsthmaEnvironmental AllergyInflammatory Lung DiseaseOccupational Health SciencesPediatric Lung DiseaseAllergenRelative RiskChildhood Food AllergyChildhood WheezingRespiratory ToxicologyEnvironmental HealthDer P1 ExposurePublic HealthAllergy PreventionEarly Life ExposureDomestic ExposureAllergyEnvironmental Lung DiseasesMaternal HealthFel D1EpidemiologyInhalation ToxicologyPediatricsFood AllergiesEnvironmental DiseaseYoung ChildrenIndoor Air QualityAir PollutionMedicineClinical Allergy
The impact of domestic exposure to cat allergen (Fel d1) and house dust mite (Der p1) on wheezing from birth to the age of 4 years was investigated in a multicenter prospective birth cohort; 1,611 mothers were recruited before delivery in Ashford, England, and Barcelona and Menorca, Spain. Exposures were gathered via dust sample collection at children's home in their first year of life. Families provided complete outcome data (wheezing status in all 4 years) for 1,289 children. Domestic allergen levels varied substantially between centers. Six hundred three (47%) children never wheezed during their first 4 years of life. Der p1 did not correlate with any type of wheezing outcome. Fel d1 significantly increased the risk of wheezing in 3- and 4-year-olds in comparison to 1-year-olds. Distinct risk profiles were found for wheezing at different ages. Multivariate analysis revealed an interaction between Fel d1 and maternal asthma among children who wheeze in Year 4 (relative risk = 2.77; 95% confidence interval = 1.19-6.46). Our data support the idea that several patterns of wheezing with different risk profiles exist among young children. The effect of Fel d1 exposure varied according to age and maternal asthma.
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