Abstract

BackgroundChronic respiratory symptoms involving bronchitis, cough and phlegm in children are underappreciated but pose a significant public health burden. Efforts for prevention and management could be supported by an understanding of the relative importance of determinants, including environmental exposures. Thus, we aim to develop a prediction model for bronchitic symptoms.MethodsSchoolchildren from the population-based southern California Children’s Health Study were visited annually from 2003 to 2012. Bronchitic symptoms over the prior 12 months were assessed by questionnaire. A gradient boosting model was fit using groups of risk factors (including traffic/air pollution exposures) for all children and by asthma status. Training data consisted of one observation per participant in a random study year (for 50% of participants). Validation data consisted of: (1) a random (later) year in the same participants (within-participant); (2) a random year in participants excluded from the training data (across-participant).ResultsAt baseline, 13.2% of children had asthma and 18.1% reported bronchitic symptoms. Models performed similarly within- and across-participant. Previous year symptoms/medication use provided much of the predictive ability (across-participant area under the receiver operating characteristic curve (AUC): 0.76 vs 0.78 for all risk factors, in all participants). Traffic/air pollution exposures added modestly to prediction as did body mass index percentile, age and parent stress.ConclusionsRegardless of asthma status, previous symptoms were the most important predictors of current symptoms. Traffic/air pollution variables contribute modest predictive information, but impact large populations. Methods proposed here could be generalized to personalized exacerbation predictions in future longitudinal studies to support targeted prevention efforts.

Highlights

  • Chronic respiratory symptoms involving bronchitis, cough and phlegm in children are underappreciated but pose a significant public health burden

  • We found that children with previous bronchitic symptoms were at the highest risk of developing subsequent symptoms, while several traffic and regional air pollution exposures contribute to the overall model predictive ability

  • A similar approach can be used in future panel studies with more highly time resolved data to create personalized prediction models to potentially predict and prevent acute asthma exacerbations or chronic reparatory disease

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Summary

Introduction

Chronic respiratory symptoms involving bronchitis, cough and phlegm in children are underappreciated but pose a significant public health burden. Efforts for prevention and management could be supported by an understanding of the relative importance of determinants, including environmental exposures. Especially among children diagnosed with asthma, have been underappreciated and understudied [1,2,3] and pose a significant clinical and public health burden, with substantial clinical costs, loss of quality of life, and school absences [4,5,6]. Reliable prediction of chronic respiratory symptoms and an understanding of the relative importance of determinants would support prevention efforts, amongst children with asthma who are at the greatest risk [6]. The relative importance amongst the risk factors in predicting bronchitic symptoms has yet to be established

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