Title: Early Life Exposures as
1Early Life Exposures as Causes of
Asthma/Atopic Phenotypes Key Questions
- Anita L Kozyrskyj, PhD,
- Research Chair Associate Professor
- Dept Pediatrics, Faculty of Medicine Dentistry,
- University of Alberta, Edmonton, Alberta, Canada
- The Genesis of Allergy and Asthma Workshop
- Vancouver, March 2009
2Objectives
- List key questions/issues
- Identify opportunities for investigation
3Key Questions/Issues in Early Life Exposure
Measurement
- Timing of exposure
- Is there a critical window early pregnancy, late
pregnancy, first year of life, first 3 years? - Persistence of exposure
- All or nothing phenomenon during a critical time
period or first exposure followed by continued
exposure? - Accumulation of exposure
- One key exposure or a combination of exposures?
- Is there an additive risk in high risk children?
- Validity of exposure measurement
- Are we measuring what we think we are (and does
it matter)?
4Social and Economic Policies
Institutions
Neighborhoods/Communities
Living Conditions
Social Relationships
Lifecourse
Nutrition/care
Genetic Factors
Environment
Child at birth
5SAGE Maternal distress measure
-
- postpartum time period only
- one and 1-5 years (short-term)
- persistent over 1-7 years of childs life
- late onset (after postpartum period)
Continued exposure to maternal distress in early
life is associated with an increased risk of
childhood asthma. Kozyrskyj AL, Mai XM, McGrath
P, HayGlass KT, Becker AB, MacNeil B. Am J
Respir Crit Care Med 2008 177142-7.
6Risk of asthma following adjustment for
additional confounding factors
Child sex, maternal asthma, urban/rural, health
care visits, number siblings, lower respiratory
and non-respiratory tract infections, antibiotic
use in 1st yr
7Maternal Distress Phenomena in the 1st year of
life or persistent exposure
8The Complexity of the Association between
Socioeconomic Status and the Development of
Childhood Asthma as revealed by trajectory
analyses Kozyrskyj AL, Kendall GE, Jacoby P, Sly
PD, Zubrick SR. Am J Pub Health 2009 in press
9Family Income Trajectories
- Rather than pre-determined categories,
maximum-likelihood longitudinal (latent class)
modeling techniques classified children on the
basis of their familys movements in and out of
low income over the childs lifetime (timing,
duration, sequence of family low income) - SAS PROC TRAJ program was used to create family
income trajectories from birth until child age 6
or 14 years. PROC TRAJ uses Bayess theorem to
assign children to the income trajectory group
for which they had the highest probability of
belonging.
10The Complexity of the Association between
Socioeconomic Status and the Development of
Childhood Asthma as revealed by trajectory
analyses Kozyrskyj AL, Kendall GE, Jacoby P, Sly
PD, Zubrick SR. Am J Pub Health 2009 in press
11(No Transcript)
12Odds ratio for asthma subsequent to chronic low
income vs not, by age
13Are the results biologically plausible? Stress
hypothesis
- Pregnancy, early life stress and chronic family
stress were independently associated with asthma
at age 6 and diminished the SES association with
asthma - Caregiver stress in early life has been
associated with increased levels of
pro-inflammatory cytokines in asthma. Infants
(esp male) born into low income households are
more likely to have an atopic profile at birth. - By age 14, chronic life stress was associated
with a two-fold increase in asthma. - Children with asthma who experience both acute
and chronic stress show a reduction in the
expression of the glucocorticoid receptor, which
can increase the airway inflammatory response to
allergens.
14Are the results biologically plausible? Hygiene
hypothesis
- Children born to single-parents live in a SES
environment that protects against asthma
development. Single-parents made up 44 of
households that moved out of poverty.
Single-parent status diminished the inverse
association between increasing income and asthma.
When the increasing income trajectory was
compared to chronic low income, asthma risk ?d
by more than 60. - Chen et al reported that asthma likelihood was
lower in children whose families had moved up in
income, than in children who continued to live in
a low income family. Children living in
increasing income families may experience higher
rates of exposure to endotoxin and infections
during early infancy, which may protect against
asthma development. These exposures continue in
chronic low income families and increase risk of
asthma, as Celedon et al have found.
15SAGE Absence of additive risk?
Increased risk of childhood asthma from
antibiotic use in early life. Kozyrskyj AL,
Ernst P, Becker AB. Chest 2007 131 1-7.
16Key Questions/Issues in Early Life Exposure
Assessment
- Indoor environment
- Is endotoxin exposure in later life a valid
exposure for early life? - What are the important questions to ask living
on a farm or exposure to farm animals? - How do you disentangle reverse causation for
antibiotic use? - Psychosocial environment
- What is it about socioeconomic status that is
associated with asthma? - What types of exposures are important, ie.
depression vs anxiety? - How do you disentangle reverse causation for
exposure maternal distress (living exposure
which can change in response to the child)? - Outdoor environment
- Why measure outdoor environmental exposures when
the infant/toddler spends most of her/his time
indoors? - Do exposures during pregnancy matter and how can
they be measured?
17Key Questions/Issues in Early Life Exposure
Assessment
- Indoor environment
-
- Psychosocial environment
-
18Key Questions/Issues in Gene-Environment
Interactions
- Indoor environment
-
- Psychosocial environment
-