Italian Journal of Pediatrics (Aug 2022)

The impact of urbanization and wealth on house dust mite sensitization in children from north-central Nigeria

  • Chiara Zuiani,
  • Michele Arigliani,
  • Ramatu Zubair,
  • Livingstone Gayus Dogara,
  • Luigi Castriotta,
  • Ashel Dache Sunday,
  • Reward Christopher Audu,
  • Habibah Dadan-Garba,
  • Zakary Sani,
  • Baba Inusa,
  • Paola Cogo

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s13052-022-01348-w
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 48, no. 1
pp. 1 – 4

Abstract

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Abstract The impact of socio-economic status on the risk of allergy in African children is not clear. This was a cross sectional study including children aged 6–14 years from urban and rural settings in north-central Nigeria. Participants underwent skin prick tests to house dust mite (HDM) and an interview investigating socio-economic status through the Family Affluence Scale (FAS) based on a score of 0–6. A total of 346 children were enrolled (52.8% boys; mean age ± SD 9.6 ± 2.0 years), including 142 (41% of total) rural and 204 (59% of total) urban pupils. Prevalence of HDM sensitivity was 2.8% (4/142) in the rural setting and 15.6% (32/204) in the urban setting (P < 0.001). Among urban children, frequency of HDM sensitization was 8.6% (7/81) in the lowest socio-economic group (FAS 0–1), 13.1% (8/61) in the intermediate one (FAS 2–3) and 27.4% (17/62) in the highest one (FAS ≥ 4). Urbanization and increasing wealth are associated with a higher frequency of sensitization to HDM in Nigerian children.

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