Abstract
Asthma is common in urban centres in Latin America, but atopic asthma may not be the main phenotype among children. Helminth infections are highly prevalent in poor populations, and it was hypothesised that they attenuate allergic asthma, whereas other factors are related to the expression of a nonatopic wheeze/asthma phenotype.
A total of 1,982 children from Southern Brazil with a mean±sd age of 10.1±0.76 yrs completed asthma questionnaires, and 1,011 were evaluated for intestinal parasites and atopy using skin-prick tests (SPTs).
Wheeze in the previous 12 months was reported by 25.6%, and 9.3% showed current asthma; 13% were SPT-positive and 19.1% were positive for any helminths. Most children with either wheeze or asthma were SPT-negative; however, severe wheeze was more prevalent among the atopic minority. Helminth infections were inversely associated with positive SPT results. Bronchiolitis before the age of 2 yrs was the major independent risk factor for asthma at age 10 yrs; high-load Ascaris infection, a family history of asthma and positive SPT results were also asthma risk factors.
Most asthma and wheeze are of the nonatopic phenotype, suggesting that some helminths may exert an attenuating effect on the expression of the atopic portion of the disease, whereas viral bronchiolitis predisposes more specifically to recurrent airway symptoms.
The increased burden and prevalence of wheeze and asthma since the 1960s are well documented, especially among children living in affluent societies 1. Asthma in school-age children from developed countries is commonly associated with an atopic phenotype, including bronchial hyperresponsiveness, peripheral blood eosinophilia, increased allergen-specific immunoglobulin (Ig)E levels and positive allergen skin-prick test (SPT) results 2, 3. The International Study of Asthma and Allergies in Childhood (ISAAC) has demonstrated that asthma and asthma-related symptoms are highly prevalent among many of the less-privileged communities in Latin America 4. These data are seemingly at odds with the so-called hygiene hypothesis, and suggest that the relationship between asthma and the atopic phenotype is less clear in children from developing countries. Data from Africa show that the association of asthma with atopy is stronger in children living in urban rather than rural settings 5.
Parasitic infections are common among disadvantaged populations in Africa and Latin America. Recent data from these areas have shown an inverse association between helminth infections and allergy (defined by SPT), and probably an attenuation of asthma-related symptoms 6, 7. A series of studies in rural Ecuador have shown that asthma is not common in a highly parasitised population, and that helminth infections are inversely related to allergen skin test reactivity 8. This raises the question as to which environmental factors might be responsible for the high prevalence of asthma and asthma-related symptoms in nonaffluent populations in Latin America 9.
In the present study, a population of school-age children from a poor urban community in Southern Brazil, where helminth infections are common, was evaluated. The impact of parasite load and other environmental exposures on asthma and asthma-related symptoms at age 10 yrs was determined. It was hypothesised that asthma and asthma-related symptoms were common among these children living in a pro-inflammatory urban environment, and that helminth infections would attenuate the role of atopy in driving asthma in these children.
METHODS
As part of the ISAAC Phase II study, a sample of 2,058 schoolchildren aged 9–13 yrs were randomly chosen from a total of 3,049 children enrolled in the fourth and fifth middle-school levels of the public system of a small town, Uruguaiana, in the extreme South of Brazil. Parents were interviewed at home by trained research interviewers and completed the basic questionnaire of the ISAAC Phase II protocol along with some extra questions. The main issues under investigation were personal and familial risk factors for asthma, as well as environmental and lifestyle variables. The main outcome variables were current wheeze (“wheeze in the past 12 months”) and active asthma (“wheeze in the past 12 months” plus “asthma ever”). Severe asthma was defined as four or more acute attacks in the previous 12 months. Children were classified as having had bronchiolitis when mothers or carers answered positively to the question “Was your child admitted to a hospital or seen in an emergency room with bronchiolitis before the age of two years?” Variables such as born before term (i.e. “Was your child born before term?”), normal birthweight (≥2,500 g), maternal smoking (current and during pregnancy), number of siblings, humidity in the home, current maternal smoking (not a quantitative variable) and exclusive breastfeeding for ≥6 months were defined as in the ISAAC Phase II core protocol 10. Living in a poor neighbourhood, a marker of living standard, was classified using the response “the family lived in a suburban area with few parks and gardens”.
A random sample of these children (n = 1,200) was selected to provide stool samples for the determination of intestinal parasitic infections. Three stool samples were collected from the children on different days during home visits, with specimens rapidly transported to and processed in the laboratory. Each stool sample was analysed using three methods: 1) the method of Ritchie et al. 11 for the detection of helminth ova and protozoan cysts and oocysts; 2) the method of Baerman 12 for the identification of Strongyloides stercoralis larvae; and 3) the Kato–Katz method for quantitative evaluation of helminth ova 13. A subject was considered infected if positive results were obtained in any of the tests for specific parasites. High quantitative counts based on the Kato–Katz method were defined as those egg counts falling within the upper tertile of the distribution (which corresponded to ≥100 eggs·g−1; called high-load) for any helminth or for specifically Ascaris lumbricoides (Ascaris) infections.
The same subsample of children was also skin tested using relevant aeroallergens (Dermatophagoides pteronyssinus, D. farinae, cat dander, mix of grasses, mix of trees and Alternaria alternata, plus positive and negative controls) according to the protocol used in the ISAAC Phase II study (ALK-Abelló, Madrid, Spain) 10, 14. All SPTs were performed in the schools by a single trained researcher. A subject was defined as atopic according to the ISAAC protocol, i.e. a mean weal diameter of ≥3 mm greater than the negative control for at least one allergen.
Statistical analyses
Univariate and multivariate logistic regression models were used to calculate adjusted and unadjusted odds ratios (OR) and 95% confidence intervals (CI) for the main outcome variables (current wheeze, active asthma and SPT results). Risk factors known to be associated with wheeze and asthma, and those significantly associated with these outcomes in the bivariate analyses, were included in the multivariate models, which were always adjusted for age and sex.
The present study was approved by the Human Ethics Committee of the Pontifical Catholic University of Rio Grande do Sul, Porto Alegre, Brazil.
RESULTS
The city of Uruguaiana has a population of ∼130,000; its major economic activity relates to agriculture, with a small portion of the population working in the fields and most in service-related jobs in the town. Most of the population is not served by a sewage system, and there are high rates of unemployment and underemployment. Questionnaires were completed for 96.3% (1,982 out of 2,058) of the ISAAC Phase II sample of children. SPTs were completed in all but one of the target subsample of 1,200, and three stool samples were collected from 87.8% (1,054 out of 1,200). A total of 1,011 subjects provided complete data for parasite analysis, SPTs and ISAAC Phase II questionnaires. This subsample was broadly representative of the entire cohort, with no differences between the two samples, except that there were fewer mothers with <8 yrs of formal education and fewer families living in a poor neighbourhood in the subgroup (table 1⇓). The mean±sd age at the time of the survey was 10.1±0.76 yrs for both the complete cohort and the subsample, with a range of 8.2–13.3 yrs. The results presented here are restricted to the 1,011 children for whom complete data are available.
Demographic data
The children were breastfed for ≥6 months, and one tenth of the population was born before term. Approximately one third of mothers smoked either during their children’s first year of life or at the time of the year 10 survey; 22% smoked during pregnancy. Mothers were schooled for 6.6±2.9 yrs, with most reporting <8 yrs of formal education (table 1⇑). Children had, on average, 2.7±2.0 siblings, with a third of the subjects having no siblings; >90% lived in a poor neighbourhood and half of the households were reported as being humid.
Wheeze in the previous 12 months was present in a quarter of the children and 9.2% were reported to have active asthma (table 1⇑). Severe asthma was reported in 6.9%, 5.8% exhibited acute exacerbations severe enough to limit speech and 17.3% showed wheeze after exercising. Hospital admission or emergency room attendance for bronchiolitis before the age of 2 yrs was reported for 6.3% of the children (table 1⇑). The maternal and paternal history of asthma was positive for <10% of the children.
Of the children, 13% were atopic; the most prevalent sensitisation was that to D. pteronyssinus (11.2%), followed by D. farinae (6.6%). Very few (3.6%) were SPT-positive for the other four allergens tested (cat dander, Alternaria, and grass and tree mixes).
Infection with intestinal parasites
Almost 20% of the children were infected by helminths, with Giardia lamblia and Ascaris lumbricoides being the most common parasite recovered in the stool samples (table 2⇓); ∼10% of children were infected with multiple parasites, e.g. 5.4% of the Ascaris-infected children were also infected with Giardia.
Associations with wheeze and asthma
The vast majority (216 out of 273; 79%) of the children with current wheeze were not atopic, with only 57 giving any positive SPT results. Similarly, the majority (65 out of 93; 70%) of those with active asthma were nonatopic. However, atopic children with current asthma were more likely to show more severe disease (OR 2.6, 95% CI 1.04–6.4) than nonatopic asthmatics. Similar findings were also observed for SPT-positive current wheeze. Despite the fact that the majority of asthmatics were not atopic, being atopic was a significant risk factor for both current wheeze (OR 2.4, 95% CI 1.6–3.5) and active asthma (OR 3.4, 95% CI 2.1–5.5) in the total study group.
Most (24 out of 25; 96.0%) of the children with high-load helminths and wheezing at age 10 yrs were SPT-negative. Children with high-load Ascaris or high-load (any) helminths were more likely to show wheeze or active asthma at age 10 yrs compared with both those with a lower load and no helminths (table 3⇓). Nonatopic wheezers were almost four times more likely (OR 3.9, 95% CI 1.3–11.3) to exhibit helminth infections (49 out of 216; 22.7%) than atopic wheezers (four out of 57; 7%).This risk was even greater for nonatopic wheezers with high-load helminths and high-load Ascaris infections.
Children with bronchiolitis seen in hospital before the age of 2 yrs were at high risk of wheezing later in life and were 12 times more likely to show active asthma at the age of 10 yrs (table 3⇑). There was a synergistic interaction between bronchiolitis before the age of 2 yrs and helminth infection at 10 yrs, increasing the risk of active asthma at the age of 10 yrs >40-fold (OR 42.7, 95% CI 11.4–160.5). Children with bronchiolitis in early life were no more likely to be SPT-positive than those who did not have bronchiolitis.
Children living in humid households were significantly more likely to exhibit current wheeze and active asthma. Maternal smoking was also a risk factor for both current wheeze and active asthma (table 3⇑). Paternal asthma was significantly associated with wheeze (OR 5.0, 95% CI 2.9–8.6) and asthma (OR 5.2, 95% CI 2.9–9.5), as was maternal asthma (table 3⇑).
Risk factors for atopy
The minority of children with better educated mothers (>8 yrs of schooling) were more likely to be atopic (OR 1.8, 95% CI 1.2–2.7) than those with less maternal schooling. Other risk factors for positive SPT results on bivariate analyses were current wheeze (OR 2.4, 95% CI 1.6–3.5; p<0.001) and active asthma (OR 3.4, 95% CI 2.1–5.5; p<0.001); whereas infection with any parasite (OR 0.6, 95% CI 0.4–0.9; p<0.01) or any helminth (OR 0.4, 95% CI 0.2–0.8; p<0.01) and a higher infective load of helminth (OR 0.3, 95% CI 0.09–0.94; p<0.05) were protective. A similar trend was seen for high-load Ascaris (OR 0.4, 95% CI 0.1–1.2) and living in a poor neighbourhood (OR 0.7, 95% CI 0.3–1.5), but these did not reach significance. On average, atopic children had significantly fewer siblings (2.35±1.70 versus 2.90±2.17; p<0.01) than nonatopic children.
Multivariate logistic regression analyses
After adjusting for age and sex, the strongest independent risk factor for active asthma and current wheeze was bronchiolitis before the age of 2 yrs (table 4⇓). A maternal or paternal history of asthma, living in a humid house, positive SPT results and a high Ascaris load (or high load of any helminth) were all risk factors for active asthma (table 4⇓). More years of maternal schooling and having two or more siblings were protective against active asthma. The risk factors for current wheeze at the age of 10 yrs were similar to those for active asthma (table 4⇓); however, high Ascaris load was of borderline significance (p = 0.06) for wheeze at age 10 yrs and >8 yrs of maternal schooling was borderline and inversely associated with wheeze (p = 0.06).
When multivariate analysis was performed selecting those who were positive for any helminths, children with a history of bronchiolitis were shown to be at even greater risk of active asthma at the age of 10 yrs (OR 68.7, 95% CI 10.0–470.0; p<0.001).
Risks for nonatopic wheeze
Despite the majority of children with wheeze being nonatopic, atopy was a strong risk factor for current wheeze, active asthma and severe wheeze. In order to investigate whether nonatopic asthma might be a different phenotype with different risk factors, the analyses were also performed in the nonatopic population. The association of Ascaris with both current wheeze (OR 11.6, 95% CI 1.5–86.3) and active asthma (OR 7.4, 95% CI 0.96–59.4)) was stronger for the nonatopic phenotype than in the general population. The results of multivariate analyses in 829 subjects are shown in table 5⇓. The small number of atopic subjects in the present study does not permit a proper analysis of risk factors among this group. In general, the risk factors for current wheeze and active asthma are similar in the nonatopic and total populations, with the risks due to bronchiolitis aged <2 yrs and high-load Ascaris being greater in the nonatopic population.
DISCUSSION
The aim of the present cross-sectional study was to identify risk factors associated with current wheeze and active asthma in 10-yr-old children from a nonaffluent community in Southern Brazil. The major finding of the present study is that most wheeze and asthma in these children was not related to atopy. Helminth infection, especially with a higher infective load, increased the risk of wheeze and active asthma, as did attending hospital for acute bronchiolitis during the first 2 yrs of life. Furthermore, in this population, nonatopic asthma was associated with an attenuated form of disease, with less severe or frequent exacerbations compared with atopic asthmatics.
Some authors 15–17 have suggested that the role of atopy in childhood asthma has been overestimated, even in Western countries. The fact that wheeze and asthma-like symptoms are frequently associated with atopy does not imply that these two phenomena are related in the individual child. Longitudinal studies following children from birth 18 and school-age children to adulthood 19, 20 have convincingly shown that distinct wheezing phenotypes exist in children. The interaction between genetic susceptibilities and early-life environmental exposures plays a key role in determining the distribution of these wheeze phenotypes in different populations. This is particularly important in relation to early-life infections, especially those due to respiratory viruses, and their profound impact on the recurrence of wheezing during the first decade of life 21, 22.
Pearce et al. 17 have raised the issue of the role of nonatopic asthma being underestimated in many population studies. The recently published data from the Isle of Wight, UK birth cohort study show that, at the age of 10 yrs, the prevalence of atopic and nonatopic wheeze were similar, but that atopic wheezing was more frequently associated with a diagnosis of asthma and treatment for asthma, whereas nonatopic wheeze was more closely associated with recurrent chest infections before the age of 2 yrs 15. In the present study, the vast majority of wheeze and active asthma at the age of 10 yrs was nonatopic. However, the present population was infected with helminths, which was not the situation in the Isle of Wight study nor in those studies reviewed by Pearce et al. 17. When interpreting the present findings, the potential impact of the helminth infections on SPT results for aeroallergens should also be taken into account. Helminth infections and parasite load have been associated with negative SPT results for aeroallergens in a number of studies 5, 8, 23. Brazilian researchers studying a population chronically infected with Schistosoma mansoni have reported a suppressive effect on SPT results and reduced severity of asthma symptoms 7.
Despite the inverse association of helminth infections and positive SPT results to aeroallergens, it was found that a higher load of Ascaris was a risk factor for asthma and asthma-related symptoms at the age of 10 yrs, independent of other common risk factors. This was particularly true when considering nonatopic children in isolation. A similar association has been observed in a large rural population in China 24. The respiratory effects of Ascaris on the airways may be related to its passage through the lungs during part of its life cycle and its high allergenicity 25. The clinical symptoms may be associated with Löffler-like syndrome, through either local effects of larval tissue migration, airway reactivity or bronchospasm, infectious bacterial complications of parasitic migration and aspiration or, even more rarely, chronic eosinophilic pneumonia 26. Helminths may suppress atopic inflammation in the airways, while, at the same time increasing the risk of nonatopic wheeze, possibly via the mechanism outlined above. However, in the absence of serum IgE data, the true effect of helminth infection on atopy remains a matter of speculation.
It is important to take into account the fact that high-Ascaris or high-helminth loads were arbitrarily defined as being values in the upper tertile of the distribution. This corresponded to an infective load of ≥100 eggs·g−1, which suggests a significant, but far from heavy, infection. Other studies, mainly from rural environments, report a much higher burden of infection than found in the present, rather urbanised, community of Southern Brazil. A protective effect of helminth infection on asthma and allergies may be related to either infective load or frequency of infection rather than simply to the presence of helminths. In many African studies, a protective effect has been shown with hookworm, whereas, in areas in which Ascaris is the most prevalent species, a protective effect may not be found 6. These differences have been elegantly discussed in the recent meta-analysis of Leonardi-Bee et al. 6. However, longitudinal studies are needed in order to adequately investigate whether these apparent helminth-related differences are real and why they occur.
An important risk factor for asthma reported in many studies is wheezing due to early-life respiratory viral infections 21, 27, a variable that has generally not been considered in previous parasite studies. In the present study, bronchiolitis in early life was the strongest risk factor for asthma at the age of 10 yrs. Children with hospital admission or emergency department visits for bronchiolitis before the age of 2 yrs were 17 times more likely to show active asthma, independent of other risk factors. Even more impressive was the finding that subjects with bronchiolitis who were also infected with helminths at the age of 10 yrs were at much greater risk of active asthma. This finding may suggest that this combined exposure (assuming that children infected with Ascaris at the age of 10 yrs have most probably been exposed to these agents since early in life) exerts a major effect on asthma among this mostly nonatopic population through either common or related mechanisms. Bronchiolitis was defined by a specific question answered by mothers due to the cross-sectional nature of the present study. Recall bias or misclassification may play a role here. Although no data are available regarding the agent(s) responsible for bronchiolitis in the present children, it has recently been demonstrated that, in a population with a similar social background, respiratory syncytial virus and rhinovirus were the most common agents associated with wheeze during infancy 28.
In the present study, socioeconomic status was defined by a loose variable, i.e. living in poor neighborhoods, as defined in the original ISAAC phase II protocol. There was a strong correlation between the level of maternal education and place of residence, either in a poor or a better area of town (R = 0.93). Although the current authors have no data on healthcare utilisation, there is reason to believe that being infected by helminths is related to not having access to medications, which these children receive on and off, since the major risk factor for these infections is poor hygiene, i.e. lack of a good sanitation structure. This is the case in the city where very few houses have proper sewage and garbage disposal systems in place.
The findings related to the protective factors for asthma and allergies in the proposed hygiene hypothesis must be interpreted with caution in low socioeconomic status environments, such as the one described in the present study. It seems reasonable to assume that some environmental factors exert protective effects by blocking the expression of allergy in populations in which atopic asthma is highly prevalent, and, indeed, environmental factors, such as a higher number of siblings and greater maternal education, were protective against atopy in the present study. However, the most potent environmental exposure reducing the risk of atopy here was infection with intestinal parasites.
In conclusion, the present study shows that asthma and asthma-related symptoms are highly prevalent in the present Brazilian community, in which the majority of the population are of low socioeconomic status. The most prevalent wheeze phenotype in this population was nonatopic. Even though family history of asthma and positive skin-prick test results are significant risk factors for wheezing at the age of 10 yrs, the strongest risk factor for persistence of wheeze at this age was bronchiolitis in early life. The present data show that helminth infections can simultaneously induce airway-related symptoms and attenuate atopic disease.
Acknowledgments
The authors would like to thank ALK-Abelló (Madrid, Spain) for donation of the allergens used in the skin-prick testing. The authors would also like to thank C.G. Teixeira for helpful contribution to the methods and analysis of the parasitological testing.
- Received October 1, 2006.
- Accepted February 11, 2007.
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