Reference
Guerra, Stefano, et al. “Fetal Origins of Asthma: A Longitudinal Study from Birth to Age 36 Years”. Am. J. Respir. Crit. Care Med., vol. 202, no. 12, Dec. 2020, pp. 1646–1655.
Abstract
Rationale: Deficits in infant lung function-including the ratio
of the time to reach peak tidal expiratory flow to the total
expiratory time (tptef/te) and maximal expiratory flow at FRC
(V̇maxFRC)-have been linked to increased risk for childhood
asthma.Objectives: To examine the individual and combined
effects of tptef/te and V̇maxFRC in infancy on risk for asthma
and abnormalities of airway structure into mid-adult
life.Methods: One hundred eighty participants in the Tucson
Children's Respiratory Study birth cohort had lung function
measured by the chest-compression technique in infancy (mean age
$\pm$ SD: 2.0 $\pm$ 1.2 mo). Active asthma was assessed in up to
12 questionnaires between ages 6 and 36 years. Spirometry and
chest high-resolution computed tomographic (HRCT) imaging were
completed in a subset of participants at age 26. The relations
of infant tptef/te and V̇maxFRC to active asthma and airway
structural abnormalities into adult life were tested in
multivariable mixed models.Measurements and Main Results: After
adjustment for covariates, a 1-SD decrease in infant tptef/te
and V̇maxFRC was associated with a 70% (P = 0.001) and 55% (P
= 0.005) increased risk of active asthma, respectively. These
effects were partly independent, and two out of three infants
who were in the lowest tertile for both tptef/te and V̇maxFRC
developed active asthma by mid-adult life. Infant V̇maxFRC
predicted reduced airflow and infant tptef/te reduced HRCT
airway caliber at age 26.Conclusions: These findings underscore
the long-lasting effects of the fetal origins of asthma, support
independent contributions by infant tptef/te and V̇maxFRC to
development of asthma, and link deficits at birth in tptef/te
with HRCT-assessed structural airway abnormalities in adult
life.