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Childhood asthma after bacterial colonization of the airway in neonates.

    Home Publications Childhood asthma after bacterial colonization of the airway in neonates.
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    Childhood asthma after bacterial colonization of the airway in neonates.

    By Dansk Børne Astma Center | Publications | Comments are Closed | 11 October, 2007 |

    N Engl J Med. 2007 Oct 11
    Bisgaard H, Hermansen MN, Buchvald F, Loland L, Halkjaer LB, Bønnelykke K, Brasholt M, Heltberg A, Vissing NH, Thorsen SV, Stage M, Pipper CB.

    Abstract
    BACKGROUND:
    Pathological features of the airway in young children with severe recurrent wheeze suggest an association between bacterial colonization and the initiating events of early asthma. We conducted a study to investigate a possible association between bacterial colonization of the hypopharynx in asymptomatic neonates and later development of recurrent wheeze, asthma, and allergy during the first 5 years of life.

    METHODS:
    The subjects were children from the Copenhagen Prospective Study on Asthma in Childhood birth cohort who were born to mothers with asthma. Aspirates from the hypopharyngeal region of asymptomatic 1-month-old infants were cultured for Streptococcus pneumoniae, Haemophilus influenzae, Moraxella catarrhalis, and Staphylococcus aureus. Wheeze was monitored prospectively on diary cards during the first 5 years of life. Blood eosinophil count and total IgE and specific IgE were measured at 4 years of age. Lung function was measured and asthma was diagnosed at 5 years of age.

    RESULTS:
    Hypopharyngeal samples were cultured from 321 neonates at 1 month of age. Twenty-one percent of the infants were colonized with S. pneumoniae, M. catarrhalis, H. influenzae, or a combination of these organisms; colonization with one or more of these organisms, but not colonization with S. aureus, was significantly associated with persistent wheeze (hazard ratio, 2.40; 95% confidence interval [CI], 1.45 to 3.99), acute severe exacerbation of wheeze (hazard ratio, 2.99; 95% CI, 1.66 to 5.39), and hospitalization for wheeze (hazard ratio, 3.85; 95% CI, 1.90 to 7.79). Blood eosinophil counts and total IgE at 4 years of age were significantly increased in children colonized neonatally with S. pneumoniae, M. catarrhalis, H. influenzae, or a combination of these organisms, but specific IgE was not significantly affected. The prevalence of asthma and the reversibility of airway resistance after beta2-agonist administration at 5 years of age were significantly increased in the children colonized neonatally with these organisms as compared with the children without such colonization (33% vs. 10% and 23% vs. 18%, respectively).

    CONCLUSIONS:
    Neonates colonized in the hypopharyngeal region with S. pneumoniae, H. influenzae, or M. catarrhalis, or with a combination of these organisms, are at increased risk for recurrent wheeze and asthma early in life.

    Comment in
    Of attraction and rejection–asthma and the microbial world. [N Engl J Med. 2007]
    Asthma and neonatal airway colonization. [N Engl J Med. 2008]
    Asthma and neonatal airway colonization. [N Engl J Med. 2008]
    Asthma and neonatal airway colonization. [N Engl J Med. 2008]
    Asthma and neonatal airway colonization. [N Engl J Med. 2008]

    PMID: 17928596

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    • COPSAC cohorts
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      • Methods
      • Data overview
        • COPSAC2000 Clinic
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        • COPSAC2010 Clinic
        • COPSAC2010 Exposures
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        • COPSAC2010 Biobank
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