4.5 Article

The association between environmental greenness and the risk of food allergy: A population-based study in Melbourne, Australia

Journal

PEDIATRIC ALLERGY AND IMMUNOLOGY
Volume 33, Issue 2, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/pai.13749

Keywords

egg allergy; environmental greenness; food allergy; peanut allergy

Funding

  1. National Health & Medical Research Council (NHMRC) of Australia
  2. Ilhan Food Allergy Foundation
  3. AnaphylaxiStop
  4. Charles and Sylvia Viertel Medical Research Foundation
  5. Victorian Government's Operational Infrastructure Support Program
  6. NHMRC awards
  7. University of Melbourne Faculty of Medicine, Dentistry and Health Sciences Research Fellowship
  8. Honorary National Herat Foundation Award
  9. Melbourne Children's Clinician-Scientist Fellowship

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Exposure to environmental greenness in childhood is associated with an increased risk of food allergy, especially peanut allergy. Socioeconomic status and air pollution may modify this association.
Background While exposure to environmental greenness in childhood has shown mixed associations with the development of allergic disease, the relationship with food allergy has not been explored. We investigated the association between exposure to environmental greenness and challenge-confirmed food allergy in a large population-based cohort. Methods The HealthNuts study recruited 5276 12-month-old infants in Melbourne, Australia, who underwent skin prick testing to peanut, egg, and sesame; infants with a detectable wheal underwent food challenges to determine food allergy status. Environmental greenness was estimated using the normalized difference vegetation index (NDVI) for five buffer zones around the infant's home address: at the home, 100 m, 500 m, 800 m, and 1600 m radial distances. Environmental greenness was categorized into 3 tertiles and mixed effects logistic regression models quantified the association between greenness and the risk of food allergy, adjusting for confounding and accounting for clustering at the neighborhood level. Results NDVI data were available for n = 5097. For most buffer zones, medium and high greenness, compared to low greenness, was associated with an increased risk of peanut allergy (eg, 100 m tertile 2 aOR 1.89 95% CI 1.22-2.95, tertile 3 aOR 1.78 95% CI 1.13-2.82). For egg allergy, the effect sizes were smaller (100 m tertile 2 aOR 1.52 95% CI 1.16-1.97, tertile 3 aOR 1.38 95% CI 1.05-1.82). Socioeconomic status (SES) modified the association between greenness and peanut allergy, but not egg allergy; associations were apparent in the low SES group but not in the high SES group (p for interaction 0.08 at 100 m). Air pollution (PM2.5) also modified the associations between environmental greenness and food allergy, with associations present in high air pollution areas but not low (p for interaction at 100 m 0.05 for peanut and 0.06 for egg allergy.) Conclusion Increased exposure to environmental greenness in the first year of life was associated with an increased risk of food allergy. Increased greenness may correlate with higher pollen levels which may trigger innate immune responses skewing the immune system to the Th2-dependent allergic phenotype; additionally, some pollen and food allergens are cross-reactive. Given the mixed data on greenness and other allergies, the relationship appears complex and may also be influenced by confounding variables outside those that were measured in this study.

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