Prematurity and prescription asthma medication from childhood to young adulthood: a danish national cohort study

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Prematurity and prescription asthma medication from childhood to young adulthood : a danish national cohort study. / Damgaard, Anne Louise; Hansen, Bo Moelholm; Mathiasen, Rene; Buchvald, Frederik; Lange, Theis; Greisen, Gorm.

In: PLOS ONE, Vol. 10, No. 2, e0117253, 04.02.2015, p. 1-17.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Damgaard, AL, Hansen, BM, Mathiasen, R, Buchvald, F, Lange, T & Greisen, G 2015, 'Prematurity and prescription asthma medication from childhood to young adulthood: a danish national cohort study', PLOS ONE, vol. 10, no. 2, e0117253, pp. 1-17. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0117253

APA

Damgaard, A. L., Hansen, B. M., Mathiasen, R., Buchvald, F., Lange, T., & Greisen, G. (2015). Prematurity and prescription asthma medication from childhood to young adulthood: a danish national cohort study. PLOS ONE, 10(2), 1-17. [e0117253]. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0117253

Vancouver

Damgaard AL, Hansen BM, Mathiasen R, Buchvald F, Lange T, Greisen G. Prematurity and prescription asthma medication from childhood to young adulthood: a danish national cohort study. PLOS ONE. 2015 Feb 4;10(2):1-17. e0117253. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0117253

Author

Damgaard, Anne Louise ; Hansen, Bo Moelholm ; Mathiasen, Rene ; Buchvald, Frederik ; Lange, Theis ; Greisen, Gorm. / Prematurity and prescription asthma medication from childhood to young adulthood : a danish national cohort study. In: PLOS ONE. 2015 ; Vol. 10, No. 2. pp. 1-17.

Bibtex

@article{6e757ceb9681491894801fa04292c300,
title = "Prematurity and prescription asthma medication from childhood to young adulthood: a danish national cohort study",
abstract = "INTRODUCTION: Preterm birth is associated with increased risk of asthma-like symptoms and purchase of prescription asthma medication in childhood. We investigated whether this association persists into adulthood and whether it is affected by accounting for neonatal respiratory morbidity (acute respiratory disease and bronchopulmonary dysplasia).METHODS: A national cohort of all infants born in Denmark in the period 1980-2009 was included in this register study. Data on purchase of asthma medication (combination of inhaled β-2 agonists and other drugs for obstructive airway disease) in 2010-2011 were obtained from the Danish National Prescription Registry. Associations between gestational age (GA), neonatal respiratory morbidity and a cross-sectional evaluation of asthma medication purchase were explored by multivariate logistic regressions.RESULTS: A full dataset was obtained on 1,790,241 individuals, 84.6% of all infants born in the period. Odds-ratios (95% CI) for the association between GA and purchase of asthma medication during infancy were: 3.86 (2.46-6.04) in GA 23-27 weeks, 2.37 (1.84-3.04) in GA 28-31 weeks and 1.59 (1.43-1.77) in GA 32-36 weeks compared to term infants with GA 37-42 weeks. Associations weakened in older age groups and became insignificant in young adults born extremely and very preterm with odds-ratios: 1.41 (0.63-3.19) and 1.15 (0.83-1.60) in GA 23-27 and 28-31 respectively. When adjusting for neonatal respiratory morbidity, the associations weakened but persisted both in childhood and adolescence.CONCLUSION: There was a strong dose-response association between gestational age and the purchase of prescription asthma medication in infancy and childhood. This association weakened during adolescence and was mostly non-significant in young adulthood. The increased risk of prescription asthma medication purchase in ex-preterm children could only partly be explained by neonatal respiratory morbidity.",
author = "Damgaard, {Anne Louise} and Hansen, {Bo Moelholm} and Rene Mathiasen and Frederik Buchvald and Theis Lange and Gorm Greisen",
year = "2015",
month = feb,
day = "4",
doi = "10.1371/journal.pone.0117253",
language = "English",
volume = "10",
pages = "1--17",
journal = "PLoS ONE",
issn = "1932-6203",
publisher = "Public Library of Science",
number = "2",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Prematurity and prescription asthma medication from childhood to young adulthood

T2 - a danish national cohort study

AU - Damgaard, Anne Louise

AU - Hansen, Bo Moelholm

AU - Mathiasen, Rene

AU - Buchvald, Frederik

AU - Lange, Theis

AU - Greisen, Gorm

PY - 2015/2/4

Y1 - 2015/2/4

N2 - INTRODUCTION: Preterm birth is associated with increased risk of asthma-like symptoms and purchase of prescription asthma medication in childhood. We investigated whether this association persists into adulthood and whether it is affected by accounting for neonatal respiratory morbidity (acute respiratory disease and bronchopulmonary dysplasia).METHODS: A national cohort of all infants born in Denmark in the period 1980-2009 was included in this register study. Data on purchase of asthma medication (combination of inhaled β-2 agonists and other drugs for obstructive airway disease) in 2010-2011 were obtained from the Danish National Prescription Registry. Associations between gestational age (GA), neonatal respiratory morbidity and a cross-sectional evaluation of asthma medication purchase were explored by multivariate logistic regressions.RESULTS: A full dataset was obtained on 1,790,241 individuals, 84.6% of all infants born in the period. Odds-ratios (95% CI) for the association between GA and purchase of asthma medication during infancy were: 3.86 (2.46-6.04) in GA 23-27 weeks, 2.37 (1.84-3.04) in GA 28-31 weeks and 1.59 (1.43-1.77) in GA 32-36 weeks compared to term infants with GA 37-42 weeks. Associations weakened in older age groups and became insignificant in young adults born extremely and very preterm with odds-ratios: 1.41 (0.63-3.19) and 1.15 (0.83-1.60) in GA 23-27 and 28-31 respectively. When adjusting for neonatal respiratory morbidity, the associations weakened but persisted both in childhood and adolescence.CONCLUSION: There was a strong dose-response association between gestational age and the purchase of prescription asthma medication in infancy and childhood. This association weakened during adolescence and was mostly non-significant in young adulthood. The increased risk of prescription asthma medication purchase in ex-preterm children could only partly be explained by neonatal respiratory morbidity.

AB - INTRODUCTION: Preterm birth is associated with increased risk of asthma-like symptoms and purchase of prescription asthma medication in childhood. We investigated whether this association persists into adulthood and whether it is affected by accounting for neonatal respiratory morbidity (acute respiratory disease and bronchopulmonary dysplasia).METHODS: A national cohort of all infants born in Denmark in the period 1980-2009 was included in this register study. Data on purchase of asthma medication (combination of inhaled β-2 agonists and other drugs for obstructive airway disease) in 2010-2011 were obtained from the Danish National Prescription Registry. Associations between gestational age (GA), neonatal respiratory morbidity and a cross-sectional evaluation of asthma medication purchase were explored by multivariate logistic regressions.RESULTS: A full dataset was obtained on 1,790,241 individuals, 84.6% of all infants born in the period. Odds-ratios (95% CI) for the association between GA and purchase of asthma medication during infancy were: 3.86 (2.46-6.04) in GA 23-27 weeks, 2.37 (1.84-3.04) in GA 28-31 weeks and 1.59 (1.43-1.77) in GA 32-36 weeks compared to term infants with GA 37-42 weeks. Associations weakened in older age groups and became insignificant in young adults born extremely and very preterm with odds-ratios: 1.41 (0.63-3.19) and 1.15 (0.83-1.60) in GA 23-27 and 28-31 respectively. When adjusting for neonatal respiratory morbidity, the associations weakened but persisted both in childhood and adolescence.CONCLUSION: There was a strong dose-response association between gestational age and the purchase of prescription asthma medication in infancy and childhood. This association weakened during adolescence and was mostly non-significant in young adulthood. The increased risk of prescription asthma medication purchase in ex-preterm children could only partly be explained by neonatal respiratory morbidity.

U2 - 10.1371/journal.pone.0117253

DO - 10.1371/journal.pone.0117253

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 25651521

VL - 10

SP - 1

EP - 17

JO - PLoS ONE

JF - PLoS ONE

SN - 1932-6203

IS - 2

M1 - e0117253

ER -

ID: 131105629