4.5 Article

Persistence of parental-reported asthma at early ages: A longitudinal twin study

Journal

PEDIATRIC ALLERGY AND IMMUNOLOGY
Volume 33, Issue 3, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/pai.13762

Keywords

asthma; asthma-like symptoms; children; discordant twin design

Funding

  1. Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research (NWO)
  2. Netherlands Organisation for Health Research and Development (ZonMW) [024.001.003, 480-15-001/674]
  3. KNAW Academy Professor Award [PAH/6635]
  4. Amsterdam Public Health (APH) research institute

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Based on analysis of twin data, this study found a high genetic correlation between asthma-like symptoms at age 3 and asthma at age 7, indicating a high persistence of asthma development between early childhood and school age.
Background Currently, we cannot predict whether a pre-school child with asthma-like symptoms will have asthma at school age. Whether genetic information can help in this prediction depends on the role of genetic factors in persistence of pre-school to school-age asthma. We examined to what extent genetic and environmental factors contribute to persistence of asthma-like symptoms at ages 3 to asthma at age 7 using a bivariate genetic model for longitudinal twin data. Methods We performed a cohort study in monozygotic and dizygotic twins from the Netherlands Twin Register (NTR, n = 21,541 twin pairs). Bivariate genetic models were fitted to longitudinal data on asthma-like symptoms reported by parents at age 3 and 7 years to estimate the contribution of genetic and environmental factors. Results Bivariate genetic modeling showed a correlation on the liability scale between asthma-like symptoms at age 3 and asthma at age 7 of 0.746 and the contribution of genetics was estimated to be 0.917. The genetic analyses indicated a substantial influence of genetic factors on asthma-like symptoms at ages 3 and 7 (heritability 80% and 90%, respectively); hence, contribution of environmental factors was low. Persistence was explained by a high (rg = 0.807) genetic correlation. Conclusion Parental-reported asthma-like symptoms at age 3 and asthma at age 7 are highly heritably. The phenotype of asthma-like symptoms at age 3 and 7 was highly correlated and mainly due to heritable factors, indicating high persistence of asthma development over ages 3 and 7.

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