Month of birth and outdoor temperature after birth predict childhood atopic diseases in Finland.

IF 4.5
Juha Luukkonen, Heta Moustgaard, Hanna Remes, Pekka Martikainen
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Abstract

Background: Previous evidence on season-of-birth differences in atopic diseases is partially mixed, and the etiology behind them is not well understood. For example, outdoor temperature may be an important modifier of the association but has been previously neglected.

Methods: We assess how the month of birth is associated with medication use for atopic diseases at ages 0-15 and how outdoor temperatures after birth modify these associations for 0.55 million Finns born during 1995-2004. We used Finnish register data on purchases of medications used for allergic rhinitis, eczema, asthma, and food allergies. We predicted month-of-birth associations with medication use using extensive controls for observed and unobserved confounders and assessed effect modification by 3-month mean outdoor temperature after birth.

Results: Approximately half of the children had at least one purchase of medication used for atopic diseases. For children born in spring or summer, the probability of medication use was moderately lower than for children born in the autumn or winter. Among children born in the autumn or winter, exposure to the coldest outdoor temperatures in the first 3 months of life was associated with a nearly 10-percentage-point increase in the risk for medication use compared with the warmest temperatures.

Conclusions: Behind the moderate overall associations between month of birth and childhood atopic diseases, there was notable variation by environmental conditions after birth, with cold weather after birth being particularly harmful. Future studies should assess what specific exposures do the outdoor temperatures affect, and in turn how they affect the development of atopic diseases.

芬兰出生月份和出生后室外温度预测儿童特应性疾病。
背景:以往关于特应性疾病的出生季节差异的证据部分是混杂的,其背后的病因也没有得到很好的理解。例如,室外温度可能是这种关联的一个重要改变因素,但以前一直被忽视。方法:我们评估出生月份与0-15岁特应性疾病药物使用的相关性,以及出生后室外温度如何改变1995-2004年出生的55万芬兰人的这些相关性。我们使用芬兰注册的用于治疗过敏性鼻炎、湿疹、哮喘和食物过敏的药品的购买数据。我们通过对观察到的和未观察到的混杂因素进行广泛的控制来预测出生月份与药物使用的关联,并通过出生后3个月的平均室外温度来评估效果的改变。结果:大约一半的儿童至少购买过一次用于特应性疾病的药物。对于春季或夏季出生的儿童,使用药物的可能性略低于秋季或冬季出生的儿童。在秋季或冬季出生的儿童中,与最温暖的温度相比,在生命的前3个月暴露在最寒冷的室外温度下,使用药物的风险增加了近10个百分点。结论:出生月份与儿童特应性疾病之间总体存在适度关联,但出生后的环境条件存在显著差异,其中出生后的寒冷天气尤其有害。未来的研究应该评估室外温度会影响哪些特定的暴露,以及它们如何影响特应性疾病的发展。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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