Carina Venter

and 9 more

Background Two studies examining the association between maternal diet inflammatory indices (DII) during pregnancy and offspring asthma and/or wheeze have shown either no effect, or increased risk. Neither study investigated a biological pathway for the association. We examined the association between maternal DII and risk of offspring asthma and/or wheeze, and sought to determine whether cord sera cytokines/chemokines might connect maternal DII with offspring risk. Methods Analysis included 1228 dyads in Healthy Start, a prospective prebirth cohort from Colorado. DII scores were computed for each mother based on repeated 24-hour dietary recalls during pregnancy. Child diagnosis of asthma and/or wheeze up to four years was obtained from electronic medical records. For a subset of participants, cord sera was analyzed for five cytokines and two chemokines. Results Unadjusted analyses showed positive association between maternal DII scores and child asthma and/or wheeze by 4 years (OR = 1.17; 95% CI: 1.07, 1.27), but the association was attenuated and no longer significant in adjusted models (OR = 1.13; 95% CI: 0.99, 1.28). There were no significant associations between cord sera cytokines/chemokines and child asthma and/or wheeze. There were no significant assocations between DII scores and any cytokine or chemokine measured. Conclusion Our study showed that the inflammatory profile of the maternal diet was not significantly associated with offspring asthma and/or wheeze or cord sera cytokines and chemokines. Although the maternal diet in pregnancy seems an obvious biological target for asthma and/or wheeze prevention, factors other than the inflammatory profile need to be investigated.

CARMEN RIGGIONI

and 41 more

In December 2019, China reported the first cases of the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19). This disease, caused by the severe acute respiratory syndrome-related coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2), has developed into a pandemic. To date it has resulted in ~5.6 million confirmed cases and caused 353,334 related deaths worldwide. Unequivocally, the COVID-19 pandemic is the gravest health and socio-economic crisis of our time. In this context, numerous questions have emerged in demand of basic scientific information and evidence-based medical advice on SARS-CoV-2 and COVID-19. Although the majority of the patients show a very mild, self-limiting viral respiratory disease, many clinical manifestations in severe patients are unique to COVID-19, such as severe lymphopenia and eosinopenia, extensive pneumonia, a “cytokine storm” leading to acute respiratory distress syndrome, endothelitis, thrombo-embolic complications and multiorgan failure. The epidemiologic features of COVID-19 are distinctive and have changed throughout the pandemic. Vaccine and drug development studies and clinical trials are rapidly growing at an unprecedented speed. However, basic and clinical research on COVID-19-related topics should be based on more coordinated high-quality studies. This paper answers pressing questions, formulated by young clinicians and scientists, on SARS-CoV-2, COVID-19 and allergy, focusing on the following topics: virology, immunology, diagnosis, management of patients with allergic disease and asthma, treatment, clinical trials, drug discovery, vaccine development and epidemiology. Over 140 questions were answered by experts in the field providing a comprehensive and practical overview of COVID-19 and allergic disease.