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Exploring the association between severe respiratory syncytial virus infection and asthma: a registry-based twin study.

    Home Publications Exploring the association between severe respiratory syncytial virus infection and asthma: a registry-based twin study.
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    Exploring the association between severe respiratory syncytial virus infection and asthma: a registry-based twin study.

    By Dansk Børne Astma Center | Publications | Comments are Closed | 15 June, 2009 |

    Am J Respir Crit Care Med. 2009 Jun 15
    Thomsen SF, van der Sluis S, Stensballe LG, Posthuma D, Skytthe A, Kyvik KO, Duffy DL, Backer V, Bisgaard H.

    Abstract
    RATIONALE:
    Severe respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) infection is associated with asthma but the nature of this association is imperfectly understood.

    OBJECTIVES:
    To examine the nature of the association between severe RSV infection and asthma in a population-based sample of twins.

    METHODS:
    Data on hospitalization due to RSV infection was gathered for all twins born in Denmark between 1994 and 2000 (8,280 pairs) and linked to information on asthma obtained from hospital discharge registries and parent-completed questionnaires. Genetic variance components models and direction of causation models were fitted to the observed data.

    MEASUREMENTS AND MAIN RESULTS:
    RSV hospitalization and asthma were positively associated (r = 0.43), and genetic determinants for the two disorders overlapped completely. Modeling the direction of causation between RSV hospitalization and asthma showed that a model in which asthma “causes” RSV hospitalization fitted the data significantly better (P = 0.39 for deterioration in model fit) than a model in which RSV hospitalization “causes” asthma (P < 0.001 for deterioration in model fit), even when sex, birth weight, and maternal smoking during pregnancy were accounted for.

    CONCLUSIONS:
    RSV infection that is severe enough to warrant hospitalization does not cause asthma but is an indicator of the genetic predisposition to asthma.

    Comment in
    Causal links between RSV infection and asthma: no clear answers to an old question. [Am J Respir Crit Care Med. 2009]

    PMID: 19286626

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    • About COPSAC
      • About
      • Organization Diagram
      • Board of Directors
      • Research team
      • Location
      • Funding
      • Logo
      • Open positions
    • COPSAC cohorts
      • COPSAC2000 cohort
      • COPSAC2010 cohort
      • COPSACSEVERE cohort
      • COPSACACUTE cohort
      • Methods
      • Data overview
        • COPSAC2000 Clinic
        • COPSAC2000 Exposures
        • COPSAC2000 Omics
        • COPSAC2000 Biobank
        • COPSAC2010 Clinic
        • COPSAC2010 Exposures
        • COPSAC2010 Omics
        • COPSAC2010 Biobank
    • Dissemination
      • Theses
      • Literature for parents
    • Research Projects
      • RestoreGut
      • COPSYCH Research Alliance
      • HEDIMED Consortium
      • EDIAQI Consortium
      • EAGLE Consortium
      • EarlyVir
    • Strategy
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