posted on 2024-10-09, 23:26authored byJennifer L. Perret, NS Idrose, EH Walters, DS Bui, AJ Lowe, CJ Lodge, AR Fernandez, V Yao, I Feather, XW Zeng, BR Thompson, Bircan ErbasBircan Erbas, MJ Abramson, SC Dharmage
Introduction: Evidence on the early life risk factors of adult CRS, and the history of asthma and allergies across the life course, is limited. Aim: To investigate relationships between respiratory infective/allergic conditions in childhood, and asthma and allergies across the life course and CRS in middle age. Methods: Data were from the population-based Tasmanian Longitudinal Health Study (TAHS) cohort, first studied in 1968 when aged 6–7 years (n = 8583) and serially followed into middle age (n = 3609). Using a well-accepted epidemiological definition, participants were assigned a CRS-severity subtype at age 53: no sinusitis/CRS (reference); past doctor diagnosis only; current symptoms without doctor diagnosis; and doctor-diagnosed CRS with current symptoms. Relationships with infective/allergic respiratory illnesses at age 7, and previously published asthma-allergy trajectories from 7 to 53 years, were examined using multinominal regression. Results: In middle age, 5.8% reported current CRS symptoms with 2.5% doctor-diagnosed. Childhood conditions associated with symptomatic doctor-diagnosed CRS included frequent head colds (multinomial odds ratio [mOR] = 2.04 (95% confidence interval [95% CI]: 1.24, 3.37)), frequent tonsillitis (mOR = 1.61 [95% CI: 1.00, 2.59]) and current childhood asthma (mOR = 2.23 [95% CI: 1.25, 3.98]). Life course trajectories that featured late-onset or persistent asthma and allergies were associated with all CRS subtypes in middle age; early-onset persistent asthma and allergies (mOR = 6.74, 95% CI: 2.76, 16.4); late-onset asthma allergies (mOR = 15.9, 95% CI: 8.06, 31.4), and late-onset hayfever (mOR = 3.02, 95% CI: 1.51, 6.06) were associated with symptomatic doctor-diagnosed CRS. Conclusion: Current asthma, frequent head colds and tonsillitis at age 7 could signal a susceptible child who is at higher risk for CRS in mid-adult life and who might benefit from closer monitoring and/or proactive management. Concurrent asthma and allergies were strongly associated and are potential treatable traits of adult CRS.
Funding
GlaxoSmithKline; Royal Hobart Hospital Research Foundation; Helen MacPherson Smith Trust; Asthma Foundation of Queensland; Clifford Craig Medical Research Trust of Tasmania; University of Melbourne; Asthma Foundation of Tasmania; Asthma Foundation of Victoria; National Health and Medical Research Council (NHMRC) of Australia, Grant/Award Number: 299901, 566931 and 1021275.
History
Publication Date
2024-10-01
Journal
Allergy: European Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology