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Body mass index in young children and allergic disease: gender differences in a longitudinal study.

Murray, C S; Canoy, D; Buchan, I; Woodcock, A; Simpson, A; Custovic, A

Clinical and experimental allergy : journal of the British Society for Allergy and Clinical Immunology. 2011;41(1):78-85.

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Abstract

BACKGROUND: The increase in allergic diseases has occurred in parallel with the obesity epidemic, suggesting a possible association. OBJECTIVE: We investigated the relationship of body mass index (BMI) up to age 8 years with allergic disease within a birth cohort. METHODS: Children were followed from birth and were reviewed at age 3, 5 and 8 years (n=731; male 406). Parents completed questionnaires; children were weighed, measured, skin prick tested and examined. RESULTS: Increasing BMI at 3, 5 and 8 years increased the risk of current wheezing at the corresponding age (odds ratio [95% confidence interval] per standardized deviation score: age 3, 1.26 [1.04-1.53], P=0.02; age 5, 1.33 [1.06-1.67], P=0.02; age 8, 1.27 [1.0-1.62], P=0.05). The effect of BMI on wheeze at age 8 years differed between boys and girls, with a significant positive association in girls, but not in boys (P=0.04 for interaction). The effect of BMI at earlier ages on current or subsequent wheezing did not differ significantly between genders. Increasing BMI significantly increased the risk of physician-diagnosed eczema at age 5 (1.23 [1.04-1.47], P=0.02) and 8 (1.23 [1.03-1.45], P=0.02), with a significant interaction between gender and BMI at age 5 (P=0.04). There was no association between BMI and sensitization. Being overweight at age 3 years was significantly associated with late-onset wheeze (3.83 [1.51-9.75], P=0.005), persistent wheeze (4.15 [2.07-8.32], P<0.001) and persistent eczema (1.79 [1.03-3.13], P=0.04) in both boys and girls. CONCLUSIONS: Being overweight is associated with an increased risk of allergic disease in childhood. However, the strength of the association varies with the gender, age and atopic phenotype.

Bibliographic metadata

Type of resource:
Content type:
Publication type:
Published date:
Abbreviated journal title:
ISSN:
Place of publication:
England
Volume:
41
Issue:
1
Pagination:
78-85
Digital Object Identifier:
10.1111/j.1365-2222.2010.03598.x
Pubmed Identifier:
20718779
Pii Identifier:
CEA3598
Access state:
Active

Institutional metadata

University researcher(s):

Record metadata

Manchester eScholar ID:
uk-ac-man-scw:134415
Created by:
Taylor, Scott
Created:
27th October, 2011, 09:29:39
Last modified by:
Taylor, Scott
Last modified:
7th July, 2014, 18:16:17

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