Elsevier

The Journal of Pediatrics

Volume 116, Issue 2, February 1990, Pages 248-251
The Journal of Pediatrics

Original article
Long-term follow-up of a cohort of children with alpha-1-antitrypsin deficiency*

https://doi.org/10.1016/S0022-3476(05)82882-3Get rights and content

We assessed lung function, liver function, and smoking attitudes and behavic in 22 adolescents with homozygous α1-antitrypsin deficiency whose condititor had been detected through neonatal screening in the early 1970s. All subjects had normal lung volumes, expiratory flow rates, and diffusing capacity except for two siblings with mild asthma whose values reverted to the normal range after administration of an inhalaed bronchodilator. Liver function was normal in all subjects with the exception of one boy who had an isolated elevation of alkaline phosphatase activity. Smoking attitudes, as determined by questionnaire, did not diffier from those of 130 control subjects, but smoking initiation rates were significantly lower (p=0.02). We belleve that the issue of neonatal screening for α1-antitrypsin deficiency should be reexamined because augmentation therapy for adults with emphyseme is now available, and screening followed by family-based smoking intervention may lead to a nonsmoking life-style. The latter is especially important because the current weight of epidemiologic evidence strongly suggests that in nonsmokers with this condition, severe emphysema may never develop or, if it does, it will do so at a much later age than in smokers.

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*

Supported in part by an National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute Pulmonary Prevention Academic Award (Dr. Wall).

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