ERJ Open Research (Nov 2018)

Dynamics of respiratory symptoms during infancy and associations with wheezing at school age

  • Jakob Usemann,
  • Binbin Xu,
  • Edgar Delgado-Eckert,
  • Insa Korten,
  • Pinelopi Anagnostopoulou,
  • Olga Gorlanova,
  • Claudia Kuehni,
  • Martin Röösli,
  • Philipp Latzin,
  • Urs Frey,
  • The current Basel–Bern Infant Lung Development (BILD) cohort study group,
  • Pinelopi Anagnostopoulou,
  • Urs Frey,
  • Oliver Fuchs,
  • Olga Gorlanova,
  • Insa Korten,
  • Claudia Kuehni,
  • Philipp Latzin,
  • Elena Proietti,
  • Martin Röösli,
  • Anne Schmidt,
  • Jakob Usemann

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1183/23120541.00037-2018
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 4, no. 4

Abstract

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Children with frequent respiratory symptoms in infancy have an increased risk for later wheezing, but the association with symptom dynamics is unknown. We developed an observer-independent method to characterise symptom dynamics and tested their association with subsequent respiratory morbidity. In this birth-cohort of healthy neonates, we prospectively assessed weekly respiratory symptoms during infancy, resulting in a time series of 52 symptom scores. For each infant, we calculated the transition probability between two consecutive symptom scores. We used these transition probabilities to construct a Markov matrix, which characterised symptom dynamics quantitatively using an entropy parameter. Using this parameter, we determined phenotypes by hierarchical clustering. We then studied the association between phenotypes and wheezing at 6 years. In 322 children with complete data for symptom scores during infancy (16 864 observations), we identified three dynamic phenotypes. Compared to the low-risk phenotype, the high-risk phenotype, defined by the highest entropy parameter, was associated with an increased risk of wheezing (odds ratio (OR) 3.01, 95% CI 1.15–7.88) at 6 years. In this phenotype, infants were more often male (64%) and had been exposed to environmental tobacco smoke (31%). In addition, more infants had siblings (67%) and attended childcare (38%). We describe a novel method to objectively characterise dynamics of respiratory symptoms in infancy, which helps identify abnormal clinical susceptibility and recovery patterns of infant airways associated with persistent wheezing.