Abstract

Asthma and obesity are two significant public health problems that both originate in early childhood and have shared risk factors and manifestations. Studies suggest a strong association between asthma development and subsequent accelerated weight gain. Children are diagnosed with asthma in early childhood and are often exposed to factors associated with rapid weight gain. This article intends to demonstrate an innovative application of the piecewise mixed effects model to characterize the difference in the temporal rate of change in BMIz, the standardized scores of body mass index and weight-for-length that measure weight status, before and after asthma diagnosis in children younger than 5 years. The data consist of unique sequences from 1194 children's clinic visits during the first 5 years of life. We used a knot at the time of diagnosis and detected a differential weight-gain pattern before and after asthma diagnosis. The pre- and post-asthma-diagnosis weight-gain patterns further differ by sex and race-ethnicity. After asthma diagnosis, female children showed a higher increase in the rate of change in BMIz than males. Non-Hispanic African Americans and Hispanics had higher post-diagnosis rates of change in BMIz than Caucasians. The differential weight-gain patterns between male and female children were mainly contributed by Caucasian children. These findings could have important implications in the clinical care of children after asthma diagnosis.

Highlights

  • Childhood asthma and child obesity are significant public health problems [1,2]

  • The prevalence of childhood asthma in the United States was 9.5% in 2011, which was varied to a great extent by age, sex, and race-ethnicity [8].The prevalence is higher in boys before puberty and in girls after puberty, and it is almost double in African Americans (AA) compared to Caucasians for all ages [4]

  • The asthma and obesity comorbidities atopy, allergic rhinitis (AR), chronic conjunctivitis, and esophageal reflux were examined as potential confounders of the association of asthma diagnosis and weight-gain pattern

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Summary

Introduction

Asthma in childhood is associated with considerable morbidity and reduced quality of life and is a serious health and economic concern in the United States and worldwide [3,4]. It is the number one cause of hospitalizations in children and the most common chronic condition for days lost from school [4,5]. In children younger than 5 years, the prevalence was 6.2% in 2011-7.8% in males and 4.4% in females [8] In these very young children, the prevalence of asthma in boys and girls by races are 6.1% and 3.2% in Caucasians, 15.1% and 9.4% in AAs, 5.7% and 3.4% in Hispanics (Mexicans), and 17.1% and 10.2% in Hispanics (Puerto Ricans)

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