Division of Pulmonary Medicine, Boston Children's Hospital, Boston, Mass; Harvard Medical School, Boston, Mass.
Harvard Medical School, Boston, Mass; Division of Allergy and Immunology, Brigham and Women's Hospital, Boston, Mass.
J Allergy Clin Immunol Pract. 2021 Oct;9(10):3679-3685.e1. doi: 10.1016/j.jaip.2021.05.022. Epub 2021 Jun 6.
Inner-city children are disproportionately affected by asthma and sleep-disordered breathing (SDB). However, little is known about the association of SDB symptoms with asthma morbidity in this vulnerable population.
Assess the relationship between snoring frequency and asthma morbidity.
This study was part of the School Inner-City Asthma Study, a longitudinal prospective cohort study of children with persistent asthma who attended schools in the Northeast United States from 2008 to 2013. Participants had baseline assessments of asthma symptoms, snoring, and allergy status. Caregivers completed quarterly surveys for 12 months on symptoms of asthma, snoring, and health care outcomes. Snoring frequency (non-, rare-, sometimes-, habitual-snoring) and its relationship with asthma symptoms and asthma morbidity were assessed by mixed-effects models.
There were 1186 observations from 339 subjects. Mean age was 7.9 years; roughly half were male, and most were of minority race. Half were overweight or obese, and 65.5% had atopy. At initial snoring assessment, 24.8% reported habitual snoring, but report of snoring frequency varied over the study period. Multivariate analyses revealed increased odds of maximum asthma symptom days for habitual snoring compared with nonsnoring (1.58; 95% CI, 1.19-2.10; P < .002) and all other snoring categories. Habitual snoring was associated with greater odds of health care utilization (incidence rate ratio, 1.72; 95% CI, 1.10-2.69; P = .02) and worse asthma control (odds ratio, 1.49; 95% CI, 1.05-2.11; P = .03) compared with nonsnoring.
Snoring is common among inner-city school-age children with asthma, and habitual snoring is associated with increased asthma symptom burden and health care utilization.
城市内的儿童受到哮喘和睡眠呼吸紊乱(SDB)的影响不成比例。然而,对于这个弱势群体中 SDB 症状与哮喘发病率之间的关系,人们知之甚少。
评估打鼾频率与哮喘发病率之间的关系。
本研究是城市内哮喘研究的一部分,这是一项针对 2008 年至 2013 年期间在美国东北部学校就读的持续性哮喘儿童的纵向前瞻性队列研究。参与者在基线评估了哮喘症状、打鼾和过敏状况。护理人员在 12 个月内每季度对哮喘、打鼾和医疗保健结果的症状进行调查。通过混合效应模型评估打鼾频率(不打鼾、偶尔打鼾、经常打鼾、习惯性打鼾)及其与哮喘症状和哮喘发病率的关系。
从 339 名受试者中获得了 1186 个观测值。平均年龄为 7.9 岁;大约一半是男性,大多数是少数族裔。一半以上超重或肥胖,65.5%有过敏症。在最初的打鼾评估中,24.8%报告习惯性打鼾,但在研究期间,打鼾频率的报告有所变化。多变量分析显示,与不打鼾相比,习惯性打鼾与最大哮喘症状天数的几率增加相关(1.58;95%CI,1.19-2.10;P<.002)和所有其他打鼾类别。习惯性打鼾与更高的医疗保健利用率几率相关(发病率比,1.72;95%CI,1.10-2.69;P=.02)和更差的哮喘控制(优势比,1.49;95%CI,1.05-2.11;P=.03)与不打鼾相比。
在有哮喘的城市学龄儿童中,打鼾很常见,习惯性打鼾与哮喘症状负担增加和医疗保健利用率增加相关。