Cross sectional study of the relation between sibling number and asthma, hay fever, and eczema
a Menzies Centre for Population Health
Research, University of Tasmania, GPO Box 252-23, Hobart, Tasmania,
Australia 7001, b Department of Paediatrics and Child Health, University of
Tasmania
Correspondence to: Dr Ponsonby.
Accepted 15 May 1998
OBJECTIVES
To document the relation between
sibling number and atopic disease, and to assess the contribution of
possible confounding factors to the protective effect of siblings in
relation to asthma and hay fever.
DESIGN AND SUBJECTS
Cross sectional survey by
parental questionnaire in Tasmania, Australia, on 6378 children (92%
of those eligible) who reached 7 years of age during 1995.
METHODS
Exercise challenge lung function testing
was conducted on 428 children. Analyses reported were conducted on
singleton births only (n = 6158).
RESULTS
The prevalences of a history of asthma
ever, hay fever, and eczema were 27%, 19%, and 22%, respectively.
Asthma and hay fever, but not eczema, were inversely related to sibling
number, with evidence of a dose-response trend. The mean age at onset
for asthma or wheezy breathing decreased as the number of siblings
increased. The inverse association between sibling number and asthma or
hay fever persisted after adjustment for several confounders, such as
parental smoking or breast feeding, but did not persist after adjustment for household size in 1995.
CONCLUSIONS
The protective effect of high sibling
number could not be separated from household size at age 7, and it
appears to be operating after birth and influences the age at onset of
asthma symptoms. Further work to increase knowledge of how the
protective effect of the presence of siblings works might have
important implications for the understanding of the pathogenesis of asthma.
© 1998 by Archives of Disease in Childhood
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