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Lung health and exposure to air pollution in Malawian children (CAPS): a cross-sectional study

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Lung health and exposure to air pollution in Malawian children (CAPS): a cross-sectional study. / Rylance, Sarah; Nightingale, Rebecca; Naunje, Andrew et al.
In: Thorax, Vol. 74, No. 11, 01.11.2019, p. 1070-1077.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Rylance, S, Nightingale, R, Naunje, A, Mbalume, F, Jewell, C, Balmes, JR, Grigg, J & Mortimer, K 2019, 'Lung health and exposure to air pollution in Malawian children (CAPS): a cross-sectional study', Thorax, vol. 74, no. 11, pp. 1070-1077. https://doi.org/10.1136/thoraxjnl-2018-212945

APA

Rylance, S., Nightingale, R., Naunje, A., Mbalume, F., Jewell, C., Balmes, J. R., Grigg, J., & Mortimer, K. (2019). Lung health and exposure to air pollution in Malawian children (CAPS): a cross-sectional study. Thorax, 74(11), 1070-1077. https://doi.org/10.1136/thoraxjnl-2018-212945

Vancouver

Rylance S, Nightingale R, Naunje A, Mbalume F, Jewell C, Balmes JR et al. Lung health and exposure to air pollution in Malawian children (CAPS): a cross-sectional study. Thorax. 2019 Nov 1;74(11):1070-1077. Epub 2019 Oct 15. doi: 10.1136/thoraxjnl-2018-212945

Author

Rylance, Sarah ; Nightingale, Rebecca ; Naunje, Andrew et al. / Lung health and exposure to air pollution in Malawian children (CAPS) : a cross-sectional study. In: Thorax. 2019 ; Vol. 74, No. 11. pp. 1070-1077.

Bibtex

@article{8ec5d87dea8543dd977f14fb4d9f181f,
title = "Lung health and exposure to air pollution in Malawian children (CAPS): a cross-sectional study",
abstract = "Background Non-communicable lung disease and exposure to air pollution are major problems in sub-Saharan Africa. A high burden of chronic respiratory symptoms, spirometric abnormalities and air pollution exposures has been found in Malawian adults; whether the same would be true in children is unknown. Methods This cross-sectional study of children aged 6-8 years, in rural Malawi, included households from communities participating in the Cooking and Pneumonia Study (CAPS), a trial of cleaner-burning biomass-fuelled cookstoves. We assessed; chronic respiratory symptoms, anthropometry, spirometric abnormalities (using Global Lung Initiative equations) and personal carbon monoxide (CO) exposure. Prevalence estimates were calculated, and multivariable analyses were done. Results We recruited 804 children (mean age 7.1 years, 51.9% female), including 476 (260 intervention; 216 control) from CAPS households. Chronic respiratory symptoms (mainly cough (8.0%) and wheeze (7.1%)) were reported by 16.6% of children. Average height-for-age and weight-for-age z-scores were -1.04 and -1.10, respectively. Spirometric abnormalities (7.1% low forced vital capacity (FVC); 6.3% obstruction) were seen in 13.0% of children. Maximum CO exposure and carboxyhaemoglobin levels (COHb) exceeded WHO guidelines in 50.1% and 68.5% of children, respectively. Children from CAPS intervention households had lower COHb (median 3.50% vs 4.85%, p=0.006) and higher FVC z-scores (-0.22 vs -0.44, p=0.05) than controls. Conclusion The substantial burden of chronic respiratory symptoms, abnormal spirometry and air pollution exposures in children in rural Malawi is concerning; effective prevention and control strategies are needed. Our finding of potential benefit in CAPS intervention households calls for further research into clean-air interventions to maximise healthy lung development in children.",
keywords = "asthma epidemiology, lung physiology, paediatric asthma, paediatric lung disaese",
author = "Sarah Rylance and Rebecca Nightingale and Andrew Naunje and Frank Mbalume and Chris Jewell and Balmes, {John R.} and Jonathan Grigg and Kevin Mortimer",
year = "2019",
month = nov,
day = "1",
doi = "10.1136/thoraxjnl-2018-212945",
language = "English",
volume = "74",
pages = "1070--1077",
journal = "Thorax",
issn = "0040-6376",
publisher = "B M J PUBLISHING GROUP",
number = "11",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Lung health and exposure to air pollution in Malawian children (CAPS)

T2 - a cross-sectional study

AU - Rylance, Sarah

AU - Nightingale, Rebecca

AU - Naunje, Andrew

AU - Mbalume, Frank

AU - Jewell, Chris

AU - Balmes, John R.

AU - Grigg, Jonathan

AU - Mortimer, Kevin

PY - 2019/11/1

Y1 - 2019/11/1

N2 - Background Non-communicable lung disease and exposure to air pollution are major problems in sub-Saharan Africa. A high burden of chronic respiratory symptoms, spirometric abnormalities and air pollution exposures has been found in Malawian adults; whether the same would be true in children is unknown. Methods This cross-sectional study of children aged 6-8 years, in rural Malawi, included households from communities participating in the Cooking and Pneumonia Study (CAPS), a trial of cleaner-burning biomass-fuelled cookstoves. We assessed; chronic respiratory symptoms, anthropometry, spirometric abnormalities (using Global Lung Initiative equations) and personal carbon monoxide (CO) exposure. Prevalence estimates were calculated, and multivariable analyses were done. Results We recruited 804 children (mean age 7.1 years, 51.9% female), including 476 (260 intervention; 216 control) from CAPS households. Chronic respiratory symptoms (mainly cough (8.0%) and wheeze (7.1%)) were reported by 16.6% of children. Average height-for-age and weight-for-age z-scores were -1.04 and -1.10, respectively. Spirometric abnormalities (7.1% low forced vital capacity (FVC); 6.3% obstruction) were seen in 13.0% of children. Maximum CO exposure and carboxyhaemoglobin levels (COHb) exceeded WHO guidelines in 50.1% and 68.5% of children, respectively. Children from CAPS intervention households had lower COHb (median 3.50% vs 4.85%, p=0.006) and higher FVC z-scores (-0.22 vs -0.44, p=0.05) than controls. Conclusion The substantial burden of chronic respiratory symptoms, abnormal spirometry and air pollution exposures in children in rural Malawi is concerning; effective prevention and control strategies are needed. Our finding of potential benefit in CAPS intervention households calls for further research into clean-air interventions to maximise healthy lung development in children.

AB - Background Non-communicable lung disease and exposure to air pollution are major problems in sub-Saharan Africa. A high burden of chronic respiratory symptoms, spirometric abnormalities and air pollution exposures has been found in Malawian adults; whether the same would be true in children is unknown. Methods This cross-sectional study of children aged 6-8 years, in rural Malawi, included households from communities participating in the Cooking and Pneumonia Study (CAPS), a trial of cleaner-burning biomass-fuelled cookstoves. We assessed; chronic respiratory symptoms, anthropometry, spirometric abnormalities (using Global Lung Initiative equations) and personal carbon monoxide (CO) exposure. Prevalence estimates were calculated, and multivariable analyses were done. Results We recruited 804 children (mean age 7.1 years, 51.9% female), including 476 (260 intervention; 216 control) from CAPS households. Chronic respiratory symptoms (mainly cough (8.0%) and wheeze (7.1%)) were reported by 16.6% of children. Average height-for-age and weight-for-age z-scores were -1.04 and -1.10, respectively. Spirometric abnormalities (7.1% low forced vital capacity (FVC); 6.3% obstruction) were seen in 13.0% of children. Maximum CO exposure and carboxyhaemoglobin levels (COHb) exceeded WHO guidelines in 50.1% and 68.5% of children, respectively. Children from CAPS intervention households had lower COHb (median 3.50% vs 4.85%, p=0.006) and higher FVC z-scores (-0.22 vs -0.44, p=0.05) than controls. Conclusion The substantial burden of chronic respiratory symptoms, abnormal spirometry and air pollution exposures in children in rural Malawi is concerning; effective prevention and control strategies are needed. Our finding of potential benefit in CAPS intervention households calls for further research into clean-air interventions to maximise healthy lung development in children.

KW - asthma epidemiology

KW - lung physiology

KW - paediatric asthma

KW - paediatric lung disaese

U2 - 10.1136/thoraxjnl-2018-212945

DO - 10.1136/thoraxjnl-2018-212945

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 31467192

AN - SCOPUS:85071745411

VL - 74

SP - 1070

EP - 1077

JO - Thorax

JF - Thorax

SN - 0040-6376

IS - 11

ER -