Racial Disparities in Allergic Outcomes Persist to Age 10 Years in Black and White Children

Document Type

Article

Publication Date

1-13-2020

Publication Title

Annals of allergy, asthma & immunology

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Previous analyses in the WHEALS birth cohort demonstrated black children are more likely to experience allergic outcomes than white children by age 2 years. The results could not be explained by a host of variables.

OBJECTIVE: Assess whether racial disparities persisted to age 10 years and determine whether any differences could be explained by a panel of variables related to early life exposures in WHEALS.

METHODS: At age 10 years, WHEALS children (n=481) completed skin prick testing, spirometry and methacholine challenge and a physician exam for eczema and asthma. Allergen-specific IgEs (sIgE) and total IgE were measured. Inverse probability weighting with logistic and linear regression models was used to assess associations between race (black or white) and the outcomes.

RESULTS: Black children fared worse than white children with respect to each outcome. Black children were more likely to have eczema, asthma, sensitization (≥1 sIgE≥0.35 IU/L) and at least one positive skin pick test; however, some variability was present in the magnitudes of association within subgroups defined by delivery mode, sex of the child, prenatal indoor dog exposure, and firstborn status. In some subgroups, Black children were also more likely to have higher total IgE and worse pulmonary function test measures (PC 20 ≤25 mg/ml, % predicted FVC, FEV1/FVC, FEF 25-75). Confounding did not explain these differences.

CONCLUSION: Racial differences persisted in this cohort through age 10 years. Future studies should include potentially important, but rarely studied factors such as segregation and structural racism as these factors could explain the observed racial differences.

PubMed ID

31945477

ePublication

ePub ahead of print

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