6533b7d8fe1ef96bd1269753
RESEARCH PRODUCT
Vitamin D status during pregnancy and wheezing and asthma during childhood
Mariona BustamanteMaribel CasasJordi JulvezCéline RodaJudith Garcia-aymerichJordi SunyerAmaia IrizarAna Cristina Rodríguez-delhiAlicia AbellanAna EspluguesAdonina TardónMònica GuxensMartine VrijheidJesús VioqueJúlia SangüesaMaties TorrentMikel Basterrecheasubject
PregnancyPediatricsmedicine.medical_specialtybusiness.industryOdds ratiomedicine.diseaseLower riskRelative riskWheezeCohortmedicineVitamin D and neurologymedicine.symptombusinessAsthmadescription
Background: Maternal vitamin D can have a protective role on child’s respiratory health, but the results from prospective studies are still inconsistent. We examined whether maternal circulating vitamin D levels during pregnancy are associated with wheezing and asthma during childhood in a Spanish birth cohort. Methods: Maternal circulating 25(OH)D3 levels were measured during the first trimester of pregnancy. Information on active wheezing (wheezing episodes plus medication), wheezing patterns (early, late-onset, and persistent wheeze), and physician-diagnosed asthma ever was obtained from parental questionnaires administered from 1 to 7 years in new cohorts(N=1964) and from 1 to 9 years in an old cohort(N=294). We treated maternal 25(OH)D3 levels as continuous (ng/ml) and in tertiles: deficient( Results: Children exposed to insufficient vitamin D levels during pregnancy had lower odds of being active wheezers at 4 years in the new cohorts (odds ratio=0.63; 95% CI=0.42-0.97), compared with those children exposed to deficient levels. Children exposed to higher levels of maternal vitamin D had lower risk of developing late-onset wheezing in the new cohorts (relative risk ratio=0.97; 0.94-1.00). Results were similar in the old cohort. Children exposed to maternal vitamin D levels above 20ng/ml had lower odds of ever having diagnosis asthma in both cohorts although results did not reach significance. Conclusion: Maternal vitamin D levels above deficiency may be associated with reduced risk of wheezing and asthma in the offspring. Vitamin D dietary interventions can be considered for its potential and substantial general health benefits and its inexpensive costs.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2019-09-28 | Paediatric respiratory epidemiology |