Allergen‐specific sensitization in asthma and allergic diseases in children: the study on farmers' and non‐farmers' children
- 21 February 2005
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in Clinical and Experimental Allergy
- Vol. 35 (2) , 160-166
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-2222.2005.02172.x
Abstract
Background Farmers' children are less frequently sensitized to common allergens than the non-farmers' children, but less is known about their sensitization to other allergens and its association with clinical diseases. Objective To examine the association of farm environment with atopic sensitization, allergic diseases, expression of allergen-induced symptoms, and the importance of specific sensitization against 'common' (timothy, dog, cat, birch, Dermatophagoides pteronyssimus, mugwort) and 'other' (cockroach, horse, Lepidoglyphus destructor, cow) allergens for asthma and allergic diseases in children. Methods A cross-sectional study including 344 farmers' and 366 non-farmers' children aged 6-13 years in eastern Finland, using a self-administered written questionnaire and skin prick tests against the above-mentioned allergens. Results Farmers' children had less asthma and allergic diseases and were less often sensitized against common allergens than the non-farmers' children. However, little difference was observed in sensitization against the other allergens between the farmers' (17.2%) and non-farmers (14.5%) children [adjusted odds ratios (aOR) 1.11 (0.71-1.72)]. Being sensitized against only other allergens, without sensitization against common allergens, was unrelated to asthma or allergic diseases. Among the single allergens, sensitization against pets or pollen, or against horse or cow, had the strongest association with asthma, hayfever, and atopic eczema; no such association was seen in D. pteronyssimus, mugwort, cockroach, or L. destructor. Farmers' children had significantly less often symptoms of allergic rhinitis in contact with dog (aOR 0.32%, 95% confidence interval (CI) 0.15-0.67), cat (aOR 0.45, 0.22-0.88), or pollen (aOR 0.58%, 95% CI 0.37-0.90) than the non-farmers' children. Conclusion Farm environment reduces the occurrence of asthma, allergic diseases, and atopic sensitization in children, and also the occurrence of allergen-induced rhinitis. Remarkable differences were observed between single allergens in their association with allergic disease, stressing the importance of allergen selection when defining atopy in epidemiological studies.Keywords
This publication has 25 references indexed in Scilit:
- Bacterial DNA in house and farm barn dustJournal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology, 2003
- Which factors explain the lower prevalence of atopy amongst farmers' children?Clinical and Experimental Allergy, 2003
- Environmental Exposure to Endotoxin and Its Relation to Asthma in School-Age ChildrenNew England Journal of Medicine, 2002
- Cockroach sensitivity in Norway: a previously unidentified problem?Allergy, 2002
- Relative Scarcity of Asthma and Atopy among Rural Adolescents Raised on a FarmAmerican Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine, 2000
- Austrian children living on a farm have less hay fever, asthma and allergic sensitizationClinical and Experimental Allergy, 2000
- How much asthma is really attributable to atopy?Thorax, 1999
- Prevalence of hay fever and allergic sensitization in farmer's children and their peers living in the same rural communityClinical and Experimental Allergy, 1999
- International Study of Asthma and Allergies in Childhood (ISAAC): rationale and methodsEuropean Respiratory Journal, 1995
- Pollen Seasons: Forecasts of the Most Important Allergenic Plants in FinlandAllergy, 1986