Abstract

The association of co-occurring prenatal stress and tobacco exposures on childhood wheezing and asthma are not well established. In this study, we compared maternal prenatal hair cortisol concentration (HCC) to the maternal report of infant wheezing (y/n) in the first year of life among mother–infant dyads exposed to tobacco smoke and socioeconomic adversity. Data were obtained from the Vitamin C to Decrease Effects of Smoking in Pregnancy on Infant Lung Function study. Maternal adversity was defined by the level of education, household income, and health insurance provider. Hair was collected at delivery, representing average circulating third-trimester cortisol levels. HCC was log transformed and dichotomized into high/low cortisol groups that were placed into a multivariate model predicting wheeze. Subjects (n = 132) were primarily White with ≤high school education and receiving government-provided health insurance. Forty-five percent of infants wheezed. Average HCC was 3.39 pg/mg hair. Women with HCC > 3.55 pg/mg were more than twice as likely to report having a child who wheezed (odds ratio 2.56, 95% confidence interval 1.22–5.40; p = 0.01), adjusting for insurance provider and maternal asthma. Among this sample of dyads with prenatal smoke exposure, elevated maternal HCC was associated with child wheeze that was not diminished after consideration of covariates.

Highlights

  • Childhood wheezing and asthma disproportionately affect children who face adversity.Asthma prevalence among Black or African American children is 15.7% compared to nonHispanic White children (7.1%) and 11.8% among children of families living at

  • Prenatal maternal tobacco smoking is a well-established risk factor for childhood wheezing and asthma [2], evidence increasingly suggests that maternal prenatal psychological stress and correlates of stress contribute to childhood wheezing and asthma [3]

  • A total of 251 women participated in the VCSIP study and hair samples for cortisol analysis at delivery and maternally reported wheeze were available for 180 participants

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Summary

Introduction

Childhood wheezing and asthma disproportionately affect children who face adversity.Asthma prevalence among Black or African American children is 15.7% compared to nonHispanic White children (7.1%) and 11.8% among children of families living at

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