Am. J. Respir. Crit. Care Med., Vol 152, No. 5, 11 1995, 1497-1500.
The relationship between parental and children's serum IgE and asthma
B Burrows, FD Martinez, MG Cline and MD Lebowitz
Respiratory Sciences Center, University of Arizona College of Medicine, Tucson 85724, USA.
This paper examines the familial aggregation of physician-diagnosed asthma
in relation to the age- and sex-standardized total serum IgE levels of
children and their parents in a sample of the general population in Tucson,
Arizona, that has been followed in a longitudinal study for over 20 yr.
There were 591 nuclear families containing 1,177 children who provided
information about the presence or absence of a physician diagnosis of
asthma. The serum IgE data were less complete: both parents and one or more
of their children in 251 of the nuclear families, containing 468 children,
had serum IgE levels measured. There was a very strong tendency for
asthmatic patients to have asthmatic children, but only a small part of
this appeared to be related to the familial aggregation of total serum IgE.
In the absence of an asthmatic parent, there was a slight but significantly
higher prevalence of asthma in children of whom both parents had IgE levels
in the highest tertile. Very high rates of children's asthma depended on
there being an asthmatic parent who also had at least moderate levels of
serum IgE. It was also shown that asthmatic children have considerably
higher total IgE levels than would be expected on the basis of their
parents' IgE levels alone. The data appear compatible with several
familial- aggregation hypotheses and a strong environmental influence
determining which children are likely to develop asthma. We speculate that
the inflammation in the airways of asthmatic patients itself tends to
increase the serum IgE level, possibly secondary to mediators that it
generates.
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Copyright © 1995 American Thoracic Society
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