4.6 Article

Pollen exposure is associated with risk of respiratory symptoms during the first year of life

Journal

ALLERGY
Volume 77, Issue 12, Pages 3606-3616

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/all.15284

Keywords

aeroallergen; cohort study; infancy; interaction; longitudinal study

Funding

  1. Swiss National Science Foundation [320300_204717]
  2. Forschungsfond exzellenter Nachwuchsforschender der Universitat Basel

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Pollen exposure is associated with an increased risk of respiratory symptoms in infants, independent of maternal atopy and infant's sex. There is a complex interaction between pollen and PM2.5.
Background Pollen exposure is associated with respiratory symptoms in children and adults. However, the association of pollen exposure with respiratory symptoms during infancy, a particularly vulnerable period, remains unclear. We examined whether pollen exposure is associated with respiratory symptoms in infants and whether maternal atopy, infant's sex or air pollution modifies this association. Methods We investigated 14,874 observations from 401 healthy infants of a prospective birth cohort. The association between pollen exposure and respiratory symptoms, assessed in weekly telephone interviews, was evaluated using generalized additive mixed models (GAMMs). Effect modification by maternal atopy, infant's sex, and air pollution (NO2, PM2.5) was assessed with interaction terms. Results Per infant, 37 +/- 2 (mean +/- SD) respiratory symptom scores were assessed during the analysis period (January through September). Pollen exposure was associated with increased respiratory symptoms during the daytime (RR [95% CI] per 10% pollen/m(3): combined 1.006 [1.002, 1.009]; tree 1.005 [1.002, 1.008]; grass 1.009 [1.000, 1.23]) and nighttime (combined 1.003 [0.999, 1.007]; tree 1.003 [0.999, 1.007]; grass 1.014 [1.004, 1.024]). While there was no effect modification by maternal atopy and infant's sex, a complex crossover interaction between combined pollen and PM2.5 was found (p-value 0.003). Conclusion Even as early as during the first year of life, pollen exposure was associated with an increased risk of respiratory symptoms, independent of maternal atopy and infant's sex. Because infancy is a particularly vulnerable period for lung development, the identified adverse effect of pollen exposure may be relevant for the evolvement of chronic childhood asthma.

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