Cough during infancy and subsequent childhood asthma

E Oren, J Rothers, D A Stern, W J Morgan, M Halonen, A L Wright, E Oren, J Rothers, D A Stern, W J Morgan, M Halonen, A L Wright

Abstract

Objectives: Wheezing in infancy has been associated with subsequent asthma, but whether cough similarly influences asthma risk has been little studied. We sought to determine whether prolonged cough and cough without cold in the first year of life are associated with childhood asthma.

Methods: Participants in the Infant Immune Study, a non-selected birth cohort, were surveyed 7 times in the first 9 months of life regarding the presence of wheeze and cough. Cough for more than 28 days was defined as prolonged. Parents were asked at 1 year if the child ever coughed without a cold. Asthma was defined as parental report of physician diagnosis of asthma, with symptoms or medication use between 2 and 9 years. Logistic regression was used to assess adjusted odds for asthma associated with cough characteristics.

Results: A total of 24% (97) of children experienced prolonged cough and 23% (95) cough without cold in the first 9 months, respectively. Prolonged cough was associated with increased risk of asthma relative to brief cough (OR 3.57, CI: 1.88, 6.76), with the risk being particularly high among children of asthmatic mothers. Cough without cold (OR 3.13, 95% CI: 1.76, 5.57) was also independently associated with risk of childhood asthma. Both relations persisted after adjustment for wheeze and total IgE at age 1.

Conclusions and clinical relevance: Prolonged cough in infancy and cough without cold are associated with childhood asthma, independent of infant wheeze. These findings suggest that characteristics of cough in infancy are early markers of asthma susceptibility, particularly among children with maternal asthma.

Keywords: LRIs; allergy; childhood asthma; cough; parental asthma.

Conflict of interest statement

Conflict of interest: No conflicts of interest to disclose.

© 2015 John Wiley & Sons Ltd.

Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1
Cumulative cough duration among the IIS cohort
Figure 2
Figure 2
Adjusted odds ratios for asthma for prolonged cough and cough without a cold
Figure 3
Figure 3
Prevalence of asthma by cough duration, stratified by presence of maternal asthma

Source: PubMed

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