Lung function at school age in infants with lower respiratory tract
infections with and without wheezing: a birth cohort study.
Abstract
Objective: To evaluate the relationship between lower respiratory tract
infections (LRTI), in the first 2 years of life and lung function at
school age in the Piccolipiù birth cohort (Italy). Methods: Data on LRTI
(doctor diagnosis of bronchitis, bronchiolitis, pneumonia) and wheezing
(≥3 episodes or a diagnosis of asthmatic bronchitis) in the first 2
years of life were obtained from parental questionnaires. Lung function
was assessed at 7 years by spirometry and forced volume vital capacity
(FVC), forced expiratory volume in one second (FEV1), FEV1/FVC, forced
expiratory flow between 25 and 75%, and at 75% of FVC (FEF25-75 and
FEF75) were reported as z-scores. The associations between LRTI and
spirometric variables were estimated with linear regression models.
Results: Among 877 children studied, 22.1% had LRTI only, 5.4%
wheezing only, 13.2% had both, and 59.3% had neither LRTI nor
wheezing. Children with LRTI had lower FVC and FEV1 than children
without (z-score differences: -0.18 (95% Confidence Intervals, -0.31;
-0.06) and -0.15 ( 0.27; -0.03)). When children were stratified by
history of both LRTI and wheezing, there was no association between LRTI
only and spirometric values. Conversely, having had both LRTI and
wheezing was inversely associated with all lung function measures:
z-score differences of -0.24 ( 0.42; -0.07); -0.42 (-0.59; -0.24); -0.25
(-0.41; -0.08); -0.37 (-0.54; -0.21); -0.30 (-0.46; -0.14) for FVC,
FEV1, FEV1/FVC, FEF25-75 and FEF75, respectively. Conclusion: Infants
with wheezing and LRTI, but not those with LRTI only, had reduced lung
function at school-age.