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Dynamics of respiratory symptoms during infancy and associations with wheezing at school age
JournalArticle (Originalarbeit in einer wissenschaftlichen Zeitschrift)
 
ID 4488660
Author(s) Usemann, Jakob; Xu, Binbin; Delgado-Eckert, Edgar; Korten, Insa; Anagnostopoulou, Pinelopi; Gorlanova, Olga; Kuehni, Claudia; Röösli, Martin; Latzin, Philipp; Frey, Urs
Author(s) at UniBasel Röösli, Martin
Frey, Urs Peter
Usemann, Jakob
Delgado-Eckert, Edgar
Gorlanova, Olga
Year 2018
Title Dynamics of respiratory symptoms during infancy and associations with wheezing at school age
Journal ERJ open research
Volume 4
Number 4
Pages / Article-Number 00037-2018
Abstract Children with frequent respiratory symptoms in infancy have an increased risk for later wheezing, but the association with symptom dynamics is unknown. We developed an observer-independent method to characterise symptom dynamics and tested their association with subsequent respiratory morbidity. In this birth-cohort of healthy neonates, we prospectively assessed weekly respiratory symptoms during infancy, resulting in a time series of 52 symptom scores. For each infant, we calculated the transition probability between two consecutive symptom scores. We used these transition probabilities to construct a Markov matrix, which characterised symptom dynamics quantitatively using an entropy parameter. Using this parameter, we determined phenotypes by hierarchical clustering. We then studied the association between phenotypes and wheezing at 6 years. In 322 children with complete data for symptom scores during infancy (16 864 observations), we identified three dynamic phenotypes. Compared to the low-risk phenotype, the high-risk phenotype, defined by the highest entropy parameter, was associated with an increased risk of wheezing (odds ratio (OR) 3.01, 95% CI 1.15-7.88) at 6 years. In this phenotype, infants were more often male (64%) and had been exposed to environmental tobacco smoke (31%). In addition, more infants had siblings (67%) and attended childcare (38%). We describe a novel method to objectively characterise dynamics of respiratory symptoms in infancy, which helps identify abnormal clinical susceptibility and recovery patterns of infant airways associated with persistent wheezing.
Publisher European Respiratory Society
ISSN/ISBN 2312-0541
edoc-URL https://edoc.unibas.ch/67080/
Full Text on edoc Available
Digital Object Identifier DOI 10.1183/23120541.00037-2018
PubMed ID http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30474038
Document type (ISI) Journal Article
 
   

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