4.7 Article

A simple asthma prediction tool for preschool children with wheeze or cough

Journal

JOURNAL OF ALLERGY AND CLINICAL IMMUNOLOGY
Volume 133, Issue 1, Pages 111-+

Publisher

MOSBY-ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.jaci.2013.06.002

Keywords

Asthma; wheeze; cough; children; prediction; prognosis; persistence; longitudinal; cohort study

Funding

  1. Swiss National Science Foundation [PDFMP3-123162, 3200B0-122341]
  2. Asthma UK [07/048]
  3. European Respiratory Society/Marie Curie Joint Research Fellowship [MC 1614-2010]
  4. Swiss National Science Foundation (SNF) [PDFMP3-123162] Funding Source: Swiss National Science Foundation (SNF)

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Background: Many preschool children have wheeze or cough, but only some have asthma later. Existing prediction tools are difficult to apply in clinical practice or exhibit methodological weaknesses. Objective: We sought to develop a simple and robust tool for predicting asthma at school age in preschool children with wheeze or cough. Methods: From a population-based cohort in Leicestershire, United Kingdom, we included 1- to 3-year-old subjects seeing a doctor for wheeze or cough and assessed the prevalence of asthma 5 years later. We considered only noninvasive predictors that are easy to assess in primary care: demographic and perinatal data, eczema, upper and lower respiratory tract symptoms, and family history of atopy. We developed a model using logistic regression, avoided overfitting with the least absolute shrinkage and selection operator penalty, and then simplified it to a practical tool. We performed internal validation and assessed its predictive performance using the scaled Brier score and the area under the receiver operating characteristic curve. Results: Of 1226 symptomatic children with follow-up information, 345 (28%) had asthma 5 years later. The tool consists of 10 predictors yielding a total score between 0 and 15: sex, age, wheeze without colds, wheeze frequency, activity disturbance, shortness of breath, exercise-related and aeroallergen-related wheeze/cough, eczema, and parental history of asthma/bronchitis. The scaled Brier scores for the internally validated model and tool were 0.20 and 0.16, and the areas under the receiver operating characteristic curves were 0.76 and 0.74, respectively. Conclusion: This tool represents a simple, low-cost, and noninvasive method to predict the risk of later asthma in symptomatic preschool children, which is ready to be tested in other populations.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.7
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available