4.5 Review

Smoke exposure and childhood atopic eczema and food allergy: A systematic review and meta-analysis

Journal

PEDIATRIC ALLERGY AND IMMUNOLOGY
Volume 34, Issue 8, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/pai.14010

Keywords

atopic eczema; food allergy; meta-analysis; preconception; tobacco smoke

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This study investigated the effects of smoke exposure on the development of early eczema or food allergy/hypersensitivity in children. The results showed that parental smoking during critical development periods was generally not associated with the risk of these allergies. However, maternal active smoking during pregnancy was negatively associated with doctor-diagnosed eczema, while maternal passive smoking during pregnancy was positively associated with clinician-assessed eczema in one study.
Background There is no consensus on the effect of timing and type of smoke exposure on early allergy development. This study aimed to determine the relationship between early eczema or food allergy/hypersensitivity development in children by firstly investigating the effect of smoke exposure across critical development periods and secondly by analyzing effects of parental atcive or passive smoking.Methods Four databases (PubMed, Web of Science, Scopus and Embase) were searched in May 2022 and assessed by two independent reviewers. Case-control, cross-sectional or cohort studies reporting on smoke exposure from preconception to postnatal periods and atopic eczema, food allergy and/or hypersensitivity outcomes by age 3 years were included. The Newcastle-Ottawa Scale was used to assess study quality. Random effects model was used to estimate the pooled risk ratios.Results From 1689 identified records, 32 studies with nearly 190,000 subjects were included. Parental smoking during preconception, pregnancy and postnatal periods was generally not associated with the risk of eczema, food allergy and food sensitisation development by age 3 years. Maternal active smoking during pregnancy was negatively associated with self-reported doctor diagnosis of eczema (RR = 0.87, 95% CI 0.77-0.98; I-2 = 50.56) and maternal passive smoking during pregnancy was positively associated with clinician assessment of eczema in one study (RR = 1.38; 95% CI 1.06-1.79).Conclusion Our findings highlighted the importance of in utero programming in early-life allergy development. Despite the weak evidence, our results suggest pregnant women should minimise their contact with second-hand smoke to prevent offspring eczema development. There is a need for greater utilisation of objective allergy assessments in future studies.

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