Am. J. Respir. Crit. Care Med., Vol 153, No. 3, Mar 1996, 1098-1104.
A longitudinal evaluation of bronchial responsiveness to methacholine in children: role of baseline lung function, gender, and change in atopic status
F Forastiere, GM Corbo, V Dell'Orco, R Pistelli, N Agabiti and D Kriebel
Latium Epidemiologic Unit, Rome, Italy.
A longitudinal study was done to evaluate the determinants of bronchial
responsiveness (BR) to methacholine in children and adolescents. A cohort
of 892 7- to 11-yr-old schoolchildren was restudied after a 3.5- yr
interval. The same protocol for methacholine challenge (up to 64.0 mg/ml)
and skin prick testing was employed at both the baseline survey and
follow-up. An overall decline in the level of BR was observed, the
geometric mean slope (percent decline in FEV1 per mg/ml of methacholine)
decreasing from 0.68 (95% CI=0.61 to 0.75) to 0.51 (95% CI=0.46 to 0.57)
(p<0.001). At both surveys, the strongest determinants of slope were
baseline pulmonary function level (FEF25-75) and degree of atopic status.
After adjusting for log FEF25-75, no gender difference was found in the
first survey, whereas girls had greater BR than boys at follow-up.
Longitudinal changes in skin prick test reactivity were associated with the
BR level. Subjects in whom an initially positive skin prick test became
negative (5.3%) had an increased slope at baseline but a follow-up slope
similar to that of never skin-reactors. Conversely, those whose skin prick
test converted from negative to positive (13.0%) had a slope similar to
that of never- reactors at baseline but became stronger responders to
methacholine than never-reactors at follow-up. Finally, responsiveness was
highest in the presence of persistently positive skin prick testing
(13.5%). In conclusion, BR declines from childhood to adolescence,
paralleling the increase in lung function during this period; the decline
is less pronounced in females. Changes in atopic status are associated with
modifications in the BR level.
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Copyright © 1996 American Thoracic Society
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