Childhood infections, asthma and allergy trajectories, and chronic rhinosinusitis in middle age: A prospective cohort study across six decades

Author:

Perret Jennifer L.123ORCID,Idrose N. Sabrina1ORCID,Walters E. Haydn14ORCID,Bui Dinh S.1ORCID,Lowe Adrian J.1ORCID,Lodge Caroline J.1ORCID,Fernandez Anne R.15ORCID,Yao Vivian1ORCID,Feather Iain6ORCID,Zeng Xiao‐Wen7ORCID,Thompson Bruce R.8ORCID,Erbas Bircan9ORCID,Abramson Michael J.10ORCID,Dharmage Shyamali C.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Allergy and Lung Health Unit, Centre of Epidemiology and Biostatistics The University of Melbourne Melbourne Victoria Australia

2. The Institute for Breathing and Sleep (IBAS) Melbourne Victoria Australia

3. Department of Respiratory and Sleep Medicine Austin Hospital Melbourne Victoria Australia

4. School of Medicine University of Tasmania Hobart Tasmania Australia

5. School of Medicine Deakin University Geelong Victoria Australia

6. Gold Coast University Hospital Southport Queensland Australia

7. Department of Occupational and Environmental Health, School of Public Health Sun Yat‐sen University Guangzhou China

8. School of Health Sciences The University of Melbourne Melbourne Victoria Australia

9. School of Psychology and Public Health La Trobe University Melbourne Victoria Australia

10. School of Public Health & Preventive Medicine Monash University Melbourne Victoria Australia

Abstract

AbstractIntroductionEvidence on the early life risk factors of adult CRS, and the history of asthma and allergies across the life course, is limited.AimTo investigate relationships between respiratory infective/allergic conditions in childhood, and asthma and allergies across the life course and CRS in middle age.MethodsData 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.ResultsIn 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.ConclusionCurrent 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.

Funder

GlaxoSmithKline

Royal Hobart Hospital Research Foundation

Helen Macpherson Smith Trust

Clifford Craig Foundation

University of Melbourne

National Health and Medical Research Council

Publisher

Wiley

Reference45 articles.

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