Multiple microbial exposures in the home may protect against asthma or allergy in childhood
- PMID: 20412140
- PMCID: PMC3730840
- DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-2222.2010.03509.x
Multiple microbial exposures in the home may protect against asthma or allergy in childhood
Abstract
Background: Experimental animal data on the gram-negative bacterial (GNB) biomarker endotoxin suggest that persistence, dose, and timing of exposure are likely to influence its effects on allergy and wheeze. In epidemiologic studies, endotoxin may be a sentinel marker for a microbial milieu, including gram-positive bacteria (GPB) as well as GNB, that may influence allergy and asthma through components (pathogen-associated molecular patterns) that signal through innate Toll-like receptor pathways.
Objective: To determine the influence of current GNB and GPB exposures on asthma and allergic sensitization in school-aged children.
Methods: We examined the relationship between bacterial biomarkers and current asthma and allergic sensitization in 377 school-aged children in a birth cohort study. We then evaluated the effects of school-aged endotoxin, after controlling for exposure in early life.
Results: Exposure to GNB was inversely associated with asthma and allergic sensitization at school age [for >median endotoxin: prevalence odds ratio (POR)=0.34, 95% CI=0.2-0.7, for current asthma and prevalence ratio=0.77, 95% CI=0.6-0.97, for allergic sensitization]. In contrast, elevated GPB in the bed was inversely associated with current asthma (POR=0.41, 95% CI=0.2-0.9) but not with allergic sensitization (POR=1.07, 95% CI=0.8-1.4). School-aged endotoxin exposure remained protective in models for allergic disease adjusted for early-life endotoxin.
Conclusion: Both GNB and GPB exposures are associated with decreased asthma symptoms, but may act through different mechanisms to confer protection. Endotoxin exposure in later childhood is not simply a surrogate of early-life exposure; it has independent protective effects on allergic disease.
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