Early life determinants of lung function change from childhood to adolescence

2018 
Abstract Rationale Little is known about how perinatal and childhood factors influence lung function change between childhood and adolescence. Objectives To investigate possible early life predictors of change in FEV 1 between age 8 and 16 years. In addition, to investigate possible predictors of having persistently low lung function (FEV 1 Methods The BAMSE birth cohort study collected data throughout childhood on environmental factors, individual characteristics, and spirometric measures at 8 and 16 years (n = 1425). Associations between early life predictors (n = 31) and FEV 1 increase between 8 and 16 years were assessed with linear regression. Predictors of having persistently low lung function were examined. Results Few factors were consistently associated with altered lung function growth, although low birth weight, asthma heredity (paternal), secondhand smoke in infancy, and season of birth had a significant impact (p-value ≤0.01). The majority of subjects stayed however within the same category of lung function between ages 8 and 16 years (in total 821/1425 = 58%). Predictors associated with having persistently low lung function were gestational age, secondhand smoke (at 2 and 8 years of age), and factors related to lower respiratory tract infections in infancy. Conclusions In summary, rather few exposures in childhood were identified to have a significant impact on lung function growth between childhood and adolescence. Our data support previous study findings indicating that lung function development is influenced by factors before birth and in infancy, including second hand tobacco smoke.
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    53
    References
    19
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []
    Baidu
    map