RT Journal Article SR Electronic T1 Quality of life after acute bronchiolitis in infancy JF European Respiratory Journal JO Eur Respir J FD European Respiratory Society SP P4110 VO 40 IS Suppl 56 A1 Leif Bjarte Rolfsjord A1 Håvard Ove Skjerven A1 Petter Mowinckel A1 Kai-Håkon Carlsen A1 Egil Bakkeheim A1 Karin C.L. Carlsen YR 2012 UL http://erj.ersjournals.com/content/40/Suppl_56/P4110.abstract AB Acute bronchiolitis, parental allergic disease, atopic eczema, male gender and parental stress are risk factors for asthma development. Quality of life (QoL) may be reduced in children with allergic disease, but prospective studies on risk factors for reduced QoL in infants are lacking. Aim: Are asthma risk factors, apart from acute bronchiolitis associated with QoL nine months after hospitalization for bronchiolitis? Methods: The Infant Toddler Quality of Life Questionnaire (ITQOL(TM)) was sent to parents of 405 hospitalised infants included in a randomized clinical trial testing the efficacy of racemic adrenaline, the Bronchiolitis All SE-study. The 13 domains were analyzed by multiple linear regression including age at hospitalization, gender, atopic eczema, parental asthma and parental allergic rhinitis (risk factors). Results: Risk factors were similar for the 209 infants (mean age 13.2 months) who did and the 196 who did not return the questionnaire. Reduced QoL was found for atopic eczema (Table 1), parental asthma and female gender (four, two and one domain, respectively), but increased in children with parental allergic rhinitis (one domain).View this table:Effect on atopic eczema on QoL adjusted for asthma risk factorsAge of hospitalization did not influence any scores. Conclusion: QoL nine months after hospitalization for acute bronchiolitis was negatively associated with atopic eczema, parental asthma and female gender.