Abstract
Background: Infant bronchiolitis may be the first manifestation of asthma. Aim: To evaluate the association of early-childhood risk or protective factors for asthma and lung function reduction in adults 30 years after bronchiolitis in infancy. Methods: Forty-seven former bronchiolitis patients attended the clinical study at the median age of 29.5 years, including doctoral examination and measurement of post-bronchodilator lung function with flow-volume spirometry. Data on early-life risk factors including blood eosinophil counts on admission for bronchiolitis and on convalescence 4-6 weeks after bronchiolitis were available. Results: Low blood eosinophil count <0.25 × 10E9/l on admission for bronchiolitis was a significant protective factor and high blood eosinophil count >0.45 × 10E9/l on convalescence was a significant risk factor for asthma in adulthood independently from atopic status in infancy. Parental asthma and high blood eosinophil count >0.45 × 10E9/l during bronchiolitis were significant risk factors for irreversible airway obstruction (FEV1/FVC ratio below the 5th percentile lower limit of normality after bronchodilation). Conclusion: Our adjusted analyses confirmed that eosinopenia during infant bronchiolitis predicted low asthma risk and eosinophilia outside infection predicted high asthma risk up to the age of 28-31 years. Parental asthma and eosinophilia during bronchiolitis were recognized as risk factors for irreversible airway obstruction.
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Backman, K., Nuolivirta, K., Ollikainen, H., Korppi, M., & Piippo-Savolainen, E. (2015). Low eosinophils during bronchiolitis in infancy are associated with lower risk of adulthood asthma. Pediatric Allergy and Immunology, 26(7), 668–673. https://doi.org/10.1111/pai.12448
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