Mite, cat, and cockroach exposure, allergen sensitisation, and asthma in children: a case-control study of three schools
- 1 August 1999
- Vol. 54 (8) , 675-680
- https://doi.org/10.1136/thx.54.8.675
Abstract
The amount of allergen necessary to sensitise genetically "at risk" children is unclear. The relation between allergen exposure and asthma is also uncertain. To ensure a wide range of allergen exposures the data from case-control studies of asthma in children aged 12-14 years attending three schools in Los Alamos, New Mexico and Central Virginia were combined. Skin prick tests to indoor and outdoor allergens and bronchial hyperreactivity to histamine were assessed in children with and without symptoms of asthma. The concentration of mite, cat, and cockroach allergens in dust from the children's homes was used as a marker of exposure. Three hundred and thirty two children (157 with asthmatic symptoms and 175 controls) were investigated. One hundred and eighty three were classified as atopic on the basis of allergen skin prick tests and 68 as asthmatic (symptoms plus bronchial responsiveness). The prevalence and degree of sensitisation to mite and cockroach, but not cat, was strongly associated in atopic children with increasing domestic concentrations of these allergens. Asthma was strongly associated with sensitisation to indoor allergens (p<10(-6)) and weakly to outdoor allergens (p = 0.026). There was an association between current asthma and the concentration of mite allergen amongst atopic children (p = 0.008) but not amongst those who were specifically mite sensitised (p = 0.16). The domestic reservoir concentration of mite and cockroach, but not cat, allergen was closely related to the prevalence of sensitisation in atopic children. However, the prevalence of current asthma had a limited relationship to these allergen measurements, suggesting that other factors play a major part in determining which allergic individuals develop asthma.Keywords
This publication has 35 references indexed in Scilit:
- Relevance of allergens from cats and dogs to asthma in the northernmost province of Sweden: Schools as a major site of exposureJournal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology, 1999
- Exposure to house dust mite allergen of children admitted to hospital with asthmaClinical and Experimental Allergy, 1993
- Exposure to House-Dust Mite Allergen (Der pI) and the Development of Asthma in ChildhoodNew England Journal of Medicine, 1990
- The relative risks of sensitivity to grass pollen, house dust mite and cat dander in the development of childhood asthmaClinical and Experimental Allergy, 1989
- LINKAGE BETWEEN IMMUNOGLOBULIN E RESPONSES UNDERLYING ASTHMA AND RHINITIS AND CHROMOSOME 11qThe Lancet, 1989
- Epidemiology of acute asthma: IgE antibodies to common inhalant allergens as a risk factor for emergency room visitsJournal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology, 1989
- A two-site monoclonal antibody ELISA for the quantification of the major Dermatophagoides spp. allergens, Der p I and Der f IJournal of Immunological Methods, 1989
- Association of Asthma with Serum IgE Levels and Skin-Test Reactivity to AllergensNew England Journal of Medicine, 1989
- Analysis of Dose-Response Curves to Methacholine: An Approach Suitable for Population StudiesAmerican Review of Respiratory Disease, 1987
- Rapid method for measurement of bronchial responsiveness.Thorax, 1983