Disadvantage in early-life and persistent asthma in adolescents: a UK cohort study

Author:

Creese HannaORCID,Lai EricORCID,Mason KateORCID,Schlüter Daniela KORCID,Saglani SejalORCID,Taylor-Robinson DavidORCID,Saxena SoniaORCID

Abstract

ObjectiveTo determine how early-life risk factors explain socioeconomic inequalities in persistent asthma in adolescence.MethodsWe did a causal mediation analysis using data from 7487 children and young people in the UK Millennium Cohort Study. Persistent asthma was defined as having a diagnosis reported at any two or more time points at 7, 11 or 14 years. The main exposure was maternal education, a measure of early-life socioeconomic circumstances (SECs), used to calculate the relative index of inequality. We assessed how blocks of perinatal (maternal health behaviours, infant characteristics and duration of breastfeeding, measured at 9 months) and environmental risk factors (family housing conditions; potential exposure to infections through childcare type and sibling number, and neighbourhood characteristics, measured at 3 years) mediated the total effect of childhood SECs on persistent asthma risk, calculating the proportion mediated and natural indirect effect (NIE) via blocks of mediators.ResultsAt age 14 the overall prevalence of persistent asthma was 15%. Children of mothers with lower educational qualifications were more likely to have persistent asthma, with a clear social gradient (degree plus: 12.8% vs no qualifications: 20.3%). The NIE gives the effect of SECs acting only via the mediators and shows a 31% increased odds of persistent asthma when SECs are fixed at the highest level, and mediators at the level which would naturally occur at the lowest SECs versus highest SECs (NIE OR 1.31, 95% CI 1.04 to 1.65). Overall, 58.9% (95% CI 52.9 to 63.7) of the total effect (OR 1.70, 95% CI 1.20 to 2.40) of SECs on risk of persistent asthma in adolescence was mediated by perinatal and environmental characteristics.ConclusionsPerinatal characteristics and the home environment in early life are more important in explaining socioeconomic inequalities in persistent asthma in British adolescents than more distal environmental exposures outside the home.

Funder

NIHR School for Public Health Research

NIHR Imperial Biomedical Research Centre

NIHR Northwest London Applied Research Collaboration

Publisher

BMJ

Subject

Pulmonary and Respiratory Medicine

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