Associations between Inhaled Corticosteroid in the First 6 Years of Life and Obesity Related Traits.

2021
Rationale Infants and young children might be particularly susceptible to the potential clinical side effects of inhaled corticosteroids (ICS) on body mass index (BMI), adiposity rebound and body composition, but this has rarely been studied in long-term studies in this age-group. Objective To determine the association between ICS exposure in the first 6 years of life on BMI, adiposity rebound, body composition and blood lipid levels. Methods Children from the two Copenhagen Prospective Studies on Asthma in Childhood mother-child cohorts were included. ICS use was registered prospectively to age 6 and the cumulative dose was calculated. Multiple linear regression models were used for analysis. Measurements and Main Results A total of 932 (84%) of the 1111 children from the COPSAC cohorts had data on BMI, 786 (71%) had DXA scan data at age 6 years, and 815 (73%) had adiposity rebound age calculated. 291 children (31%) received a cumulative ICS dose > 10 weeks of standard treatment before age 6. ICS treatment during 0-6 years of age was associated with an increased BMI z-score; 0.05 SD [95% CI: 0.005 to 0.09] per one-year standard treatment, p=0.03, an earlier age at adiposity rebound; -0.18 year [95% CI: -0.28 to -0.08], p=0.0006, and a 2 % increased geometric mean android fat percentage, p=0.05. ICS exposure and DXA scan data were not associated. Conclusions ICS use in early childhood was associated with increased BMI z-score at age six, an earlier adiposity rebound and a trend of association with increased android body fat percentage.
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