Maternal Pre-Pregnancy Obesity and Recurrent Wheezing in Early Childhood

Rajesh Kumar(Lurie Children's Hospital), Rachel E. Story(Lurie Children's Hospital), Jacqueline A. Pongracic(Lurie Children's Hospital), Xiumei Hong(Memorial Medical Center), Lester Arguelles(Memorial Medical Center), Guoying Wang(Memorial Medical Center), Nataliya Kuptsova‐Clarkson(Memorial Medical Center), Colleen Pearson(Boston University), Kathryn Ortiz(Boston University), Anthony Bonzagni(Boston University), Stephanie Apollon(Boston University), Lingling Fu(Memorial Medical Center), Howard Bauchner(Boston University), Xiaobin Wang(Memorial Medical Center)
Pediatric Allergy Immunology and Pulmonology
September 1, 2010
Cited by 54

Abstract

A number of studies have linked obesity with asthma in adults and children. Few longitudinal studies have evaluated the effect of maternal pre-pregnancy obesity on either asthma or early childhood respiratory morbidity, and these have not been in urban, nonwhite populations. We sought to determine whether pre-pregnancy obesity was associated with recurrent wheezing in an urban, nonwhite population. This study includes 1,191 children from the Boston Birth Cohort (1998-present) followed prospectively to a mean age of 3.0 ± 2.4 years with study visits aligned with the pediatric primary care schedule. Multivariate logistic regression was used to evaluate the associations of maternal pre-pregnancy obesity (body mass index ≥30) with recurrent wheezing (≥4 lifetime episodes). Secondary outcomes included log-transformed cord-blood immunoglobulin E (Phadia), and physician diagnoses of eczema and food allergy. Pre-pregnancy obesity was present in 20.7% of mothers. Of the 1,191 children, 60 (5%) developed recurrent wheezing. Children of obese mothers had an increased risk of recurrent wheezing (adjusted odds ratio, 95% confidence interval: 3.51, 1.68-7.32). These associations persisted even after adjustment for fetal growth status. In contrast, maternal obesity was not associated with eczema or food allergy, and was inversely associated with log cord-blood immunoglobulin E (β, 95% confidence interval: -0.34, -0.66 to -0.02). In this predominantly urban, multiracial/ethnic birth cohort, maternal pre-pregnancy obesity was associated with an increased risk of recurrent wheezing. This association was not explained by fetal growth or increased atopy. Maternal pre-pregnancy obesity is a prevalent risk factor for respiratory morbidity in this urban, nonwhite population.


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