Journal Information
Vol. 22. Issue 5.
Pages 293-295 (September - October 2016)
Share
Share
Download PDF
More article options
Vol. 22. Issue 5.
Pages 293-295 (September - October 2016)
Research Letter
Open Access
Asthma prevalence in Portuguese preschool children: The latest scientific evidence
Visits
1045
P.T.B.S. Brancoa, R.A.O. Nunesa, M.C.M. Alvim-Ferraza, F.G. Martinsa, C. Ferrazb, L.G. Vazb, S.I.V. Sousaa,
Corresponding author
sofia.sousa@fe.up.pt

Corresponding author.
a LEPABE – Laboratory for Process Engineering, Environment, Biotechnology and Energy, Faculty of Engineering, University of Porto, Rua Dr. Roberto Frias, 4200-465 Porto, Portugal
b Departamento de Pediatria (UAG-MC), Hospital de São João, Alameda Prof. Hernâni Monteiro, 4200-319 Porto, Portugal
This item has received

Under a Creative Commons license
Article information
Full Text
Bibliography
Download PDF
Statistics
Tables (1)
Table 1. Comparison of the main characteristics of the two reviewed studies.
Full Text
Dear Editor,

Asthma is the most common and important chronic non-infectious disease in childhood and its prevalence has increased in recent years.1 However, information on childhood asthma prevalence research covering Portuguese young children is scarce and has not been compiled. Therefore, as part of the INAIRCHILD project,2 this letter aimed to review the major scientific findings of the most recently published papers on childhood asthma prevalence in Portuguese preschool aged children.

Articles published from 2005 to date were identified in the following on-line databases: Science Direct, Scopus, PubMed, and Google Scholar. Only studies in press or fully published (in English and/or Portuguese) were analyzed. Although 8 studies were found published in the last 10 years on the assessment of childhood asthma prevalence in Portuguese young children, only two of them focused on preschool aged children.

Thus, this letter reviews those only two published papers, one recently published3 and the other one published 5 years ago,4 concerning study design, methodologies used, prevalence rates and risk factors.

Table 1 summarizes the main characteristics of the two studies reviewed. Both of these studies were cross-sectional and they were conducted in big urban areas near the coast, although the study by Branco et al.3 was also conducted in rural areas away from the coast (Bragança district) providing comparisons between different geographical, social and demographic contexts. Different study population sizes were considered, but the aim was the same. Different methodologies were used to recruit the study population and to obtain health information, although in both ISAAC-derived questionnaires were used, which provided estimates of asthma prevalence based on symptoms and asthma previously diagnosed. However, the comparison of asthma prevalence results between the two studies is difficult due to different criteria used for asthma diagnosis, namely: (i) combination of answers given by the patient about respiratory symptoms and the physician's best knowledge of the patient's asthma status4 and (ii) wheezing and dyspnea simultaneously mentioned in the absence of upper respiratory infections.3 In fact, de Sousa et al.4 assumed they had found a lower prevalence for preschool age than expected due to diagnostic problems (the diagnostic procedures were based on a combination of the answers given by the patient on respiratory symptoms and the physician's best knowledge of the patient's asthma status). Thus, the difference between the asthma prevalence values found in the two studies should be interpreted with caution, because it could possibly be due to different methodologies used and different criteria considered for asthma diagnosis. Moreover, other factors like children's ages and environmental contexts were also different, which could have contributed to differences in the prevalence results.

Table 1.

Comparison of the main characteristics of the two reviewed studies.

    Branco et al. (2015)  de Sousa et al. (2011) 
Study designDate  2013 and 2014  Between February and July 2009 
Location  Porto and Bragança districts  Matosinhos (Porto Metropolitan Area) 
Study population  497 children attending nursery schools (aged under 6 years old)  576 patients, of which a sub-group of 136 were children aged 0–7 years old 
Aim  To assess asthma prevalence and associated risk factors for infants and preschoolers living in northern Portugal  To determine the prevalence of asthma by gender and stratified age groups in a Family Health Unit in Portugal 
MethodologyTo recruit study population  Children attending nursery schools  A stratified random sample obtained from the practice general database of patients in the Family Health Unit 
To collect health information  ISAAC-derived questionnaires  Two questionnaires: a physician's questionnaire and a patient's questionnaire (ISAAC-derived) 
Criteria to consider a child asthmatic  Wheezing and dyspnea reported simultaneously in the absence of upper airways inflammation, or self-reported previously diagnosed asthma  If the doctor and the patient reported symptoms of asthma, a diagnostic algorithm was used in order to confirm or reject the diagnosis. In cases of inconsistency between the information provided by the doctor and the patient, an assessment of the patient was conducted to validate the diagnosis 
OutcomesAsthma prevalence  10.7%  9.56% (8.6% when standardized for Portuguese population) 
Risk factors  Living in a non-rural location, male gender and having an asthmatic parent  Not considered 

In these two studies medical exams, like exhaled nitric oxide or spirometry, to confirm asthma diagnosis were not performed. Although not very common in preschool children, spirometry seems to be feasible in that age.5 It has been used worldwide to confirm asthmatic symptoms reported in questionnaires,6 which is very important to increase the robustness of the conclusions.

Risk factors for childhood asthma prevalence, namely demographic, environmental, psychosocial and clinical risk factors, were only studied in Branco et al.3 which concluded that living in a non-rural location, being male and having an asthmatic parent were risk factors for childhood asthma development in Portuguese preschool children. However, other important risk factors for childhood asthma development already reported in the literature for primary school aged children were not considered, namely exposure to air pollution.7

These findings led to the conclusion that asthma studies on Portuguese preschool children are rare and limited due to methodological constraints, namely obtaining precise health information and performing medical exams to confirm symptoms. More studies are needed, particularly in preschool age children living both in urban and rural areas. Those studies should include medical exams to confirm asthma symptoms. The study of lifestyle risk factors must be associated to others already studied in primary school children.

Conflicts of interest

The authors have no conflicts of interest to declare.

Acknowledgements

This work was financially supported by: Project POCI-01-0145-FEDER-006939 (Laboratory for Process Engineering, Environment, Biotechnology and Energy – LEPABE funded by FEDER funds through COMPETE2020 - Programa Operacional Competitividade e Internacionalização (POCI) – and by national funds through FCT – Fundac¿a¿o para a Cie¿ncia e a Tecnologia. The authors are also grateful to project PTDC/SAU-SAP/121827/2010 funded by FCT, COMPETE, QREN and EU; grants SFRH/BD/97104/2013 and SFRD/BPD/91918/2012, for PTBS Branco and SIV Sousa, respectively, funded by FCT, POPH/QREN and European Social Fund (ESF).

References
[1]
M.E. Van Den Akker-van Marle, J. Bruil, S.B. Detmar.
Evaluation of cost of disease: assessing the burden to society of asthma in children in the European Union.
[2]
S.I. Sousa, C. Ferraz, M.C. Alvim-Ferraz, L.G. Vaz, A.J. Marques, F.G. Martins.
Indoor air pollution on nurseries and primary schools: impact on childhood asthma – study protocol.
BMC Public Health, 12 (2012), pp. 435
[3]
P.T.B.S. Branco, R.A.O. Nunes, M.C.M. Alvim-Ferraz, F.G. Martins, C. Ferraz, L.G. Vaz, et al.
Asthma prevalence and risk factors in early childhood at Northern Portugal.
Rev Port Pneumol (Engl Ed), (2015),
[4]
J.C. de Sousa, M.E. Santo, T. Colaco, F. Almada-Lobo, J. Yaphe.
Asthma in an urban population in Portugal: a prevalence study.
BMC Public Health, 11 (2011), pp. 347
[5]
N. Santos, I. Almeida, M. Couto, M. Morais-Almeida, L.M. Borrego.
Feasibility of routine respiratory function testing in preschool children.
Rev Port Pneumol (Engl Ed), 19 (2013), pp. 38-41
[6]
N. Beydon, S.D. Davis, E. Lombardi, J.L. Allen, H.G. Arets, P. Aurora, et al.
An official American Thoracic Society/European Respiratory Society statement: pulmonary function testing in preschool children.
Am J Respir Crit Care Med, 175 (2007), pp. 1304-1345
[7]
S.I. Sousa, M.C. Alvim-Ferraz, F.G. Martins, M.C. Pereira.
Ozone exposure and its influence on the worsening of childhood asthma.
Copyright © 2016. Sociedade Portuguesa de Pneumologia
Download PDF
Pulmonology
Article options
Tools

Are you a health professional able to prescribe or dispense drugs?