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Do childhood respiratory infections continue to influence adult respiratory morbidity?

S. C. Dharmage, B. Erbas, D. Jarvis, M. Wjst, C. Raherison, D. Norbäck, J. Heinrich, J. Sunyer, C. Svanes
European Respiratory Journal 2009 33: 237-244; DOI: 10.1183/09031936.00062907
S. C. Dharmage
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B. Erbas
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D. Jarvis
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M. Wjst
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C. Raherison
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D. Norbäck
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J. Heinrich
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J. Sunyer
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C. Svanes
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Abstract

The aim of the present study was to examine the influence of childhood respiratory infections on adult respiratory health.

In 1992–1994, the European Community Respiratory Health Survey recruited community based samples of 20–44-yr-old people from 48 centres in 22 countries. Study participants completed questionnaires and underwent lung function testing. On average, 8.9 yrs later, 29 centres re-investigated their samples using similar methods. Mixed effects models comprising an estimate for the random variation between centres were used to evaluate the relevant associations.

In total, 9,175 patients participated in both studies, of whom 10.9% reported serious respiratory infections (SRI) before 5 yrs of age and 2.8% reported hospitalisation for lung disease (HLD) before 2 yrs if age. SRI was associated with current wheeze (odds ratio (OR) 1.9, 95% confidence interval (CI) 1.7–2.2), asthma (OR 2.5, 95% CI 2.2–3.1), and lower forced expiratory volume in one second (FEV1; 89 mL; 95% CI 54–126), forced vital capacity (FVC; 49 mL; 95% CI 8–90) and FEV1/FVC ratio (−1.2%; 95% CI −1.8– −0.6). Childhood respiratory infections were also associated with new asthma (OR 1.5, 95% CI 1.03–2.0), new wheeze (OR 1.5, 95% CI 1.0–2.4) and persistent wheeze (OR 2.2, 95% CI 1.4–3.6) but not with a decline in lung function. Similar findings were observed for HDL. These associations were significantly consistent across centres. SRI was associated with lower FEV1 when excluding ever asthmatics and current wheezers. The impact of early infections was significantly larger in subjects exposed to maternal or active smoking.

The impact of childhood respiratory infections on the respiratory system may not only last into adulthood but also influence development and persistence of adult respiratory morbidity.

  • Adult asthma
  • adult lung function
  • childhood respiratory infections

The impact of severe childhood respiratory infections on childhood asthma and lung function has been established. However, their implications on adult respiratory morbidity are still uncertain. This is mainly related to the scarcity of longitudinal studies investigating these associations beyond childhood.

A recent review suggests the host response rather than the infecting organism of childhood respiratory infections is the best predictor of consequences on respiratory health 1. Having recurrent chest illness, viral bronchiolitis, lower respiratory infections and doctor-treated airway disease during the first 2–3 yrs of age have been identified as predictors of childhood asthma 2–7, poor lung function 4, 8 and impaired lung growth 4. Some studies have found that the association between early respiratory infections and childhood respiratory morbidity is stronger among males 4, 8, while in the current study it was found to be stronger among females 9. Only a few studies have examined respiratory repercussions of early childhood respiratory infections in adults. These have found viral bronchiolitis during infancy and childhood pneumonia to be associated with respiratory symptoms and lower lung function in young adults 5, 10–14. Shaheen et al. 15 showed that pneumonia before age 2 yrs is related to lower forced expiratory volume in one second (FEV1) in elderly males. Furthermore, severe childhood respiratory infections have been related to asthma commencing at any time in life 16. To date, no studies have examined the longitudinal change of lung function and respiratory symptoms of this high-risk group of adults.

In the present study, data of an 8.9 yr follow-up of a cohort of adults from 28 European centres of the European Community Respiratory Health Survey (ECRHS) was analysed to determine whether severe childhood respiratory infections predict prevalence, incidence and persistence of asthma, level of lung function and change in lung function in young adults.

METHODS

Study subjects and data collection methods

The full protocol of the ECRHS has been published in the European Respiratory Journal 17. Briefly, between 1991–1993, 48 study centres in 22 countries participated in the first round of ECRHS 1 18, which comprised of two stages. Each participating centre selected a random sample of subjects aged 20–44 yrs from an area defined by pre-existing administrative boundaries with a population of ≥150,000. Where possible an up to date sampling frame was used to randomly select a minimum of 1,500 males and 1,500 females. These study subjects were posted a screening questionnaire in ECRHS 1 stage 1. Subsequently, 38 centres invited a random and a symptomatic sample of postal survey participants of ECRHS 1 stage 1 to take part in clinical investigations (ECRHS 1 stage 2). Subjects responded to a detailed a questionnaire including sociodemographic details, respiratory symptoms during the preceding 12 months, allergic symptoms and family history. They also performed baseline spirometry and underwent bronchial challenge with methacholine, and provided a blood sample for measurement of immunoglobulin (Ig)E. On average 8.9 yrs (interquartile range 8.3–9.5 yrs) after the initial investigation, 29 centres re-investigated the participants of the laboratory study using similar methods (ECRHS 2) 19. The present study included all the centres that participated in both surveys when examining outcomes related to the questionnaire survey but excluded two centres when examining lung function tests. One of these did not conduct lung function tests and the other had methodological issues with the measurements of lung function.

Definitions of respiratory morbidity outcomes

Adult respiratory morbidity was defined as ever having asthma, current wheeze, lower lung function measurements and changes in asthma status and lung function measurements between ECRHS 1 and ECRHS 2. Participants were classified as having current wheeze in the cross sectional analysis if they answered yes to the question “Have you had wheezing or whistling at any time during the last 12 months?” in the ECRHS 1. Persistent wheeze in the longitudinal analysis was defined if participants answered yes to this question in both ECRHS 1 and ECRHS 2. Participants were classified as having had self-reported asthma in the cross sectional analysis if they answered yes to the question “Have you ever had asthma?” and new self-reported asthma in the longitudinal analysis if they answered yes to this question in ECRHS 2 but not in ECRHS 1. FEV1, forced vital capacity (FVC) and the FEV1/FVC ratio were also used to assess the lung function outcomes.

Definitions of childhood infections

Exposure to childhood infections was defined using the following two questions: 1) in ECRHS 1 “Did you have a serious respiratory infection (SRI) before 5 yrs of age?” and 2) for ECRHS 2 “Were you hospitalised before 2 yrs of age for lung disease?”

Statistical methods

The current analysis only included the subjects of the random samples who participated in both ECRHS 1 and ECRHS 2.

Binary measures of asthma and current wheeze (i.e. wheeze during last 12 months), self-reported asthma, persistent wheeze, new current wheeze and new self-reported asthma were considered as outcome variables in the analysis. In addition, continuous measures of lung function, FEV1, FVC and the FEV1/FVC ratio were defined as the outcome variables. The primary exposure variables were SRI aged <5 yrs and hospitalisation for lung disease (HLD) aged<2 yrs. Confounding effects related to age, sex and social class were adjusted for in all the models and in addition height was included in models on lung function outcome measures. Moreover, variables consistently associated with the exposures at p<0.2 were included as confounders in all the models.

Mixed effects models were used to evaluate the association between exposure and outcome variables. A linear mixed effects model was used for the lung function models and a generalised linear mixed effects model with a binomial distribution and logit link function for binary response variables was considered.

As a first step, crude base models (age and height adjusted for lung function outcomes) were developed with each exposure variable. Confounders were then included and those that made a significant contribution to the final parsimonious models were retained. Parameter estimates from the lung function models may be interpreted as a change in lung function with a change in each exposure variable and corresponding 95% confidence interval (CI). To examine whether SRI or HLD was associated with a long-term decline in lung function the difference between FEV1 at ECRHS 1 and ECRHS 2 was computed as the outcome. A similar measure was used for FVC and the FEV1/FVC ratio. To determine whether each of the models were correctly specified the Hausman specification test was performed. Results from the binary outcome models are presented as odds ratios with 95% CI. Data were stratified by sex, current smoking, maternal smoking and maternal asthma and then tested for interactions.

Meta-analyses according to Dersimonian and Laird 19 were used to investigate potential heterogeneity between countries in the associations between childhood infections and subsequent adult respiratory morbidity. All statistical tests were two tailed and a p-value <0.05 was considered to be statistically significant.

RESULTS

In total, 9,175 individuals participated in both studies, of which 884 (9.6%) reported SRI aged <5 yrs and 224 (2.4%) reported HLD aged <2 yrs. Overall, 150 (17%) of the respondents who reported a SRI aged <5 yrs also reported hospitalisation for lung disease aged <2 yrs. Only 64 (1%) of the respondents who reported not having had an SRI aged <5 yrs reported HLD aged <2 yrs.

Table 1⇓ illustrates the distribution of indicators of severe childhood respiratory infections and disease outcomes of interest by country of study. There was a substantial variation in the distribution of severe childhood respiratory infections and different asthma outcomes across countries.

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Table 1—

Distribution of childhood respiratory infections and asthma outcomes by country

Table 2⇓ describes the relevant participants' characteristics by indicators of severe childhood respiratory infections. Maternal smoking and maternal asthma were associated with both indicators of childhood respiratory infections. Reported history of bedroom sharing or nursery/school attendance at <5 yrs of age, number of older siblings and personal smoking were not associated with any of the indicators of childhood respiratory infections.

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Table 2—

Distribution of relevant characteristics of participants by childhood respiratory infections

Mixed effects models were developed to evaluate the association between indicators of childhood SRI and lung function measurements (table 3⇓). In a crude (age and height) adjusted mixed effects regression, SRI aged <5 yrs was significantly associated with lower FEV1, FVC and FEV1/FVC ratio and this remained a significant predictor of all three measures even after controlling for other confounding variables. Mixed effects regression models for HLD aged <2 yrs showed similar findings to SRI aged <5 yrs. In both a crude and adjusted analyses of FEV1 and FVC, HLD aged <2 yrs was a significant predictor of lower lung function. However, the evidence for an association between HLD aged <2 yrs and FEV1/ FVC ratio was modest. Neither SRI aged <5 yrs nor HLD aged <2 yrs were significantly associated with changes in FEV1, FVC or the FEV1/FVC ratio over 8.9 yrs.

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Table 3—

Association between serious respiratory infection(SRI) aged <5 yrs, hospitalisation for lung disease (HLD) at <2 yrs of age and lung function measurements in 1992: mixed effects regression model

People who were exposed to maternal smoking and had a HLD aged <2 yrs, had lower FVC compared with those who were not exposed to maternal smoking and had a HLD. Although the inclusion of an interaction term was of borderline significance (p = 0.09) the mixed effects model explained 70% of the variation in FVC.

Table 4⇓ displays crude and adjusted estimates of exposures to SRI aged <5 yrs and HLD aged <2 yrs separately, from a mixed effects regression models for asthma and wheeze. SRI aged <5 yrs was significantly associated with an increased risk of self-reported asthma, new self-reported asthma, current wheeze and persistent wheeze. Similarly, there was strong evidence that HLD aged <2 yrs was associated with self-reported asthma, current wheeze and persistent wheeze. There was some evidence that SRI aged <5 yrs and HLD aged <2 yrs were associated with new current wheeze and HLD aged <2 yrs was associated with new self-reported asthma.

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Table 4—

Association between serious respiratory infection(SRI) aged <5 yrs, hospitalisation for lung disease (HLD) at <2 yrs of age and indicators of asthma: mixed effects regression model

People who currently smoke and had an SRI in <5 yrs of age were at a higher risk of having new self-reported asthma in the follow-up (p<0.001) compared with those who do not smoke and had an SRI in <5 yrs of age. The interaction term was significant (p = 0.02).

To examine the temporality of the association, the analysis on the association between SRI and HLD on asthma, wheeze and lung function was repeated after excluding those who developed asthma before 5 yrs of age (see online supplementary material table 3b⇑ and table 4b⇑). In total, 20% of the 1,247 participants who have previously had or have asthma, reported their first attack of asthma before <5 yrs of age. The results were consistent between the analyses.

To examine the recall bias, those with self-reported asthma or current wheeze in 1992 were excluded and repeated the analysis on the association between SRI, HLD and lung function in 1992 (see online supplementary material table 3c⇑). Results were consistent between the two analyses.

The meta-analysis demonstrated that the associations between SRI and HLD and respiratory outcomes were consistent across centres (pheterogeneity >0.05; see online supplementary material figs 1 and 2).

DISCUSSION

Adults reporting severe childhood respiratory infections had more asthma and wheeze, continued to wheeze and developed more new asthma and wheeze in adult life than controls during 9 yrs of follow-up. Severe childhood respiratory infections were also associated with a lower level of adult lung function, but were not related to lung function decline. The findings were consistent between centres with a different prevalence of childhood infections, and an association with lung function was also present when excluding all subjects with asthma and current wheeze. Childhood respiratory infections were a stronger predictor for adult respiratory morbidity among subjects exposed to maternal or active smoking.

The first 3–4 yrs of life is a time characterised by multiplication of alveoli and growth of the bronchi 20. The present findings suggest that serious respiratory infections during this critical period of lung development may cause permanent changes making lung function suboptimal, which may be carried over to adult life. This is in accordance with literature showing that young adults with a past history of bronchiolitis or pneumonia had lower lung function and more respiratory symptoms than those without such a history 5, 10, 11, 13, 14. It could be argued that having early respiratory infections is a marker of asthma 7. However, the current subgroup analysis on lung function restricted to those who never had asthma produced similar results to the main analysis contradicting this argument. This agrees with the study by Johnston et al. 13 showing that childhood pneumonia was related to poor lung function in adults with no history of wheeze.

Maternal smoking was higher among those with childhood respiratory infections. The impact of HLD aged <2 yrs on FVC was greater among those whose mothers smoked. Similarly, SRI aged <5 yrs was a significant predictor of new self-reported asthma only among current smokers. These findings may suggest that further environmental insults to the lungs are likely to compound the damage already caused by respiratory infections. Such compounding effects may explain the associations between respiratory infections and impaired lung function growth in children 8, asthma starting at any time in life 16 and the development of new asthma and wheeze over the 8-yr follow-up in the present study.

Early viral respiratory infections have been suggested to lead to allergic sensitisation by 3 yrs of age and therefore to the development of asthma 21. Some studies suggest that atopy prone children may develop more prominent symptoms with infections, which present as serious respiratory infection 3. A higher prevalence of atopy, defined using specific IgE levels among those who had been hospitalised for lung disease but not among those who had a serious respiratory infection before 5 yrs of age was observed. Similarly, allergic sensitisation in children aged >7 yrs 4, 5, 7, 10 or young adults 4, 5, 7, 10 was related neither to childhood lower respiratory infections 4, 5, 7, 10 nor to doctor treated airway disease 4, 5, 7, 10.

The current study has many methodological strengths. The large sample size provided sufficient power to investigate rare events such as HLD and SRI. Objective measures of respiratory morbidity were collected via lung function testing. Results can be generalised widely as the study was conducted across many countries, and the fact that the findings were consistent across centres with a different prevalence of SRI and HLD strengthen the conclusion that there is an underlying biological effect.

The main limitation of the study is related to the retrospective collection of information on childhood respiratory infections. A study of adults reporting on childhood pets twice 9 yrs apart showed a high reliability in adults reporting on a childhood event; however, some degree of nondifferential misclassification was present 22. The fact that almost all subjects reporting HLD in ECRHS 2 had reported serious childhood infections 9 yrs earlier in ECRHS 1 suggest that the reporting is relatively reliable. Conversely, concerning childhood infections, asthmatics may recall early infections more accurately, thus causing differential misclassification and a spurious association between childhood infections and the indicators of asthma. However, the present results on the association between childhood infections and adult lung function were reproduced in the analysis restricted to subjects without any history of asthma and current wheeze. Furthermore, recall error when assessing childhood infections (SRI) in ECRHS 1 is unlikely to have affected reporting of subsequent onset of asthma or wheeze 9 yrs later. Thus, it seems unlikely that the observed associations between childhood respiratory infections and measures of respiratory morbidity are entirely explained by recall bias.

The current findings have important clinical practice, public health and research implications. Clinicians as well as adults with a past history of serious childhood respiratory infections should be made aware of the possible increased risk of chronic respiratory health problems. Findings of the present study highlight the importance of primary prevention of childhood respiratory infections through immunisations. Given that the adverse impact of serious childhood respiratory infections was aggravated by maternal and personal smoking, the current authors suggest that every effort should be made to discourage parental and personal smoking among those with such a history. Further studies are required to gain a better insight into the nature and mechanism of the on going alteration in airway function related to childhood respiratory infections.

Support statement

For full details of the funding of this study go to the Acknowledgements section.

Statement of interest

A statement of interest for this study can be found at www.erj.ersjournals.com/misc/statements.shtml

Acknowledgments

The European Community Respiratory Health Survey (ECRHS) study is a joint project involving many participants and is funded by many sources. The staff involved in the ECRHS study were as follows: P. Burney (project leader); S. Chinn (statistician); D. Jarvis and C. Luczynska (principal investigators); J. Knox (project co-ordinator); J. Potts (assistant statistician); and S. Arinze (data manager; all National Heart and Lung Institute, Imperial College, London, UK).

The investigators in the Early life Working Group in ECRHS are as follows: C. Svanes (Chair); S. Dharmage (Melbourne, Australia); T. Gislason (Reykjavik, Iceland); M. Gunnbjørnsdottir (Uppsala, Sweden); J. Heinrich (Neuherberg, Germany); D. Jarvis (London, UK); B. Leynaert (Paris, France); D. Ludvigsdottir (Reykjavik, Iceland); R. de Marco, (Verona, Italy); F. Neukirch (Paris, France); C. Raherison (Paris, France); J. Sunyer (Barcelona, Spain); S. Villani (Pavia, Italy); and M. Wjst (Neuherberg, Germany).

The Principal Investigators and Senior Scientific Team in ECRHS are as follows: P. Vermeire, J. Weyler, M. Van Sprundel, V. Nelen (South Antwerp and Antwerp City, Belgium); R. Jogi, A. Soon (Tartu, Estonia); F. Neukirch, B. Leynaert, R. Liard, M. Zureik (Paris, France); I. Pin, J. Ferran-Quentin (Grenoble, France); J. Heinrich, M. Wjst, C. Frye, I. Meyer (Erfurt, Germany); T. Gislason, E. Bjornsson, D. Gislason, T. Blondal, K.B. Jorundsdottir (Reykjavik, Iceland); M. Bugiani, P. Piccioni, E. Caria, A. Carosso, E. Migliore, G. Castiglioni (Turin, Italy); R. de Marco, G. Verlato, E. Zanolin, S. Accordini, A. Poli, V. Lo Cascio, M. Ferrari (Verona, Italy); A. Marinoni, S. Villani, M. Ponzio, F. Frigerio, M. Comelli, M. Grassi, I. Cerveri, A. Corsico (Pavia, Italy); J. Schouten (Groningen, the Netherlands); M Kerkhof (Geleen, the Netherlands); A. Gulsvik, E. Omenaas, C. Svanes, B. Laerum (Bergen, Norway); J.M. Antó, J. Sunyer, M. Kogevinas, J.P. Zock, X. Basagana, A. Jaen, F. Burgos (Barcelona, Spain); J. Maldonado, A. Pereira, J.L. Sanchez (Huelva, Spain); J. Martinez-Moratalla Rovira, E. Almar (Albacete, Spain); N. Muniozguren, I. Urritia (Galdakao, Spain); F. Payo (Oviedo, Spain); C. Janson, G. Boman, D. Norback, M. Gunnbjornsdottir (Uppsala, Sweden); K. Toren, L. Lillienberg, A.C. Olin, B. Balder, A. Pfeifer-Nilsson, R. Sundberg (Gothenburg, Sweden); E. Norrman, M. Soderberg, K. Franklin, B. Lundback, B. Forsberg, L. Nystrom (Umeå, Sweden); N. Künzli, B. Dibbert, M. Hazenkamp, M. Brutsche, U. Ackermann-Liebrich (Basel, Switzerland); D. Jarvis, B. Harrison (Norwich, UK); D. Jarvis, R. Hall, D. Seaton (Ipswich, UK).

S.C. Dharmage was supported by the National Health Medical Research Council, Australia.

The coordination of ECRHS II was supported by the European Commission, as part of their Quality of Life programme. The following bodies funded the local studies in ECRHS II in this study.

Albacete Fondo de Investigaciones Santarias (grant code: 97/0035-01, 99/0034-01 and 99/0034-02), Hospital Universitario de Albacete, Consejeria de Sanidad (Albacete); Basque Health Department (Galdakao); Fondo de Investigaciones Sanitarias (grant code: 99/0034-01 and 99/0034-02), Red Respira (RTIC 03/11 ISC IIF; Barcelona); Fondo de Investigaciones Sanitarias (FIS; grant code: 97/0035-01, 99/0034-01 and 99/0034-02; Huelva, Spain). FWO (Fund for Scientific Research)-Flanders Belgium (grant code: G.0402.00), University of Antwerp, Flemish Health Ministry (Antwerp, Belgium). Swiss National Science Foundation, Swiss Federal Office for Education and Science, Swiss National Accident Insurance Fund (Basel, Swizerland). Norwegian Research Council, Norwegian Asthma and Allergy Association, Glaxo Wellcome AS, Norway Research Fund (Bergen, Norway). Institut Pneumologique d'Aquitaine (Bordeaux); Programme Hospitalier de Recherche Clinique-DRC de Grenoble, Ministry of Health, Direction de la Recherche Clinique, Ministere de l'Emploi et de la Solidarite, Direction Generale de la Sante, CHU de Grenoble, Comite des Maladies Respiratoires de l'Isere (Grenoble); Programme Hospitalier de Recherche Clinique-DRC de Grenoble, Ministry of Health, Direction de la Recherche Clinique, CHU de Grenoble, Ministere de l'Emploi et de la Solidarite, Direction Generale de la Sante, Aventis, Direction Régionale des Affaires Sanitaires et Sociales Languedoc-Roussillon, Oviedo Fondo de Investigaciones Santarias (grant code: 97/0035-01, 99/0034-01 and 99/0034-02; Montpellier); Ministere de l'Emploi et de la Solidarite, Direction Generale de la Sante, UCBPharma, Aventis, GlaxoSmithKline France, Programme Hospitalier de Recherche Clinique-DRC de Grenoble, Ministry of Health, Direction de la Recherche Clinique, CHU de Grenoble (Paris, France). GSF National Research Centre for Environment and Health, Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG; grant code FR 1526/1-1; Erfurt); GSF National Research Centre for Environment and Health, Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (grant code MA 711/4-1; Hamburg, Germany). Swedish Heart Lung Foundation, Swedish Foundation for Health Care Sciences and Allergy Research, Swedish Asthma and Allergy Foundation, Swedish Cancer and Allergy Foundation (Gothenburg, Sweden); Swedish Heart Lung Foundation, Swedish Foundation for Health Care Sciences and Allergy Research, Swedish Asthma and Allergy Foundation, Swedish Cancer and Allergy Foundation (Umeå); Swedish Heart Lung Foundation, Swedish Foundation for Health Care Sciences and Allergy Research, Swedish Asthma and Allergy Foundation, Swedish Cancer and Allergy Foundation (Uppsala, Sweden). National Asthma Campaign (Ipswich and Norwich, UK). GlaxoSmithKline Italy, Italian Ministry of University and Scientific and Technological Research, Local University Funding for Research 1998 and 1999 (Pavia, Italy); ASL 4 Regione Piemonte, AO CTO/ICORMA Regione Piemonte, Ministero dell'Università e della Ricerca Scientifica (Turin, Italy); Glaxo Wellcome Spa, University of Verona, Italian Ministry of University and Scientific and Technological Research, GlaxoSmithKline Italy (Verona, Italy). American Lung Association of Oregon, Northwest Health Foundation, Collins Foundation, Merck Pharmaceutical (Portland, USA). Icelandic Research Council, Icelandic University Hospital Fund (Reykjavik, Iceland). Estonian Science Foundation (Tartu, Estonia).

The following bodies funded ECRHS I for centres in ECRHS II. Asthma Foundation of Victoria, Allen and Hanburys (Australia). Belgian Science Policy Office, National Fund for Scientific Research (Belgium). Ministère de la Santé, GlaxoSmithKline France, Institut Pneumologique d'Aquitaine, Contrat de Plan Etat-Région Languedoc-Rousillon, CNMATS, CNMRT (90MR/10, 91AF/6), Ministre delegué de la santé, RNSP (France). GSF and the Bundesminister für Forschung und Technologie (Bonn, Germany). Ministero dell'Università e della Ricerca Scientifica e Tecnologica, Consiglio Nazionale dell Ricerche, Regione Veneto grant RSF no. 381/05.93 (Italy). Norwegian Research Council project no. 101422/310 (Norway). Dutch Ministry of Wellbeing, Public Health and Culture (the Netherlands). Ministerio de Sanidad y Consumo FIS (grants 91/0016060/00E-05E and 93/0393) and grants from Hospital General de Albacete, Hospital General Juan Ramón Jiménez, Consejería de Sanidad, Principado de Asturias (Spain). The Swedish Medical Research Council, the Swedish Heart Lung Foundation, the Swedish Association against Asthma and Allergy (Sweden). Swiss National Science Foundation grant 4026-28099 (Swizerland). National Asthma Campaign, British Lung Foundation, Department of Health, South Thames Regional Health Authority (UK). United States Department of Health, Education and Welfare Public Health Service (grant 2 S07 RR05521-28).

The following centres took part at their own expense: M. Abramson, S. Dharmage, J. Raven, E.H. Walters (Melbourne, Australia); A. Taytard, C. Raherison (Bordeaux, France); J. Bousquet, P. Demoly (Montpellier, France); K. Richter (Hamburg, Germany); M. Osborne, S. Buist, W. Vollmer and L. Johnson (Portland, USA).

Footnotes

  • This article has supplementary material accessible from www.erj.ersjournals.com

  • Received May 24, 2007.
  • Accepted September 27, 2008.
  • © ERS Journals Ltd

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Vol 33 Issue 2 Table of Contents
European Respiratory Journal: 33 (2)
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Do childhood respiratory infections continue to influence adult respiratory morbidity?
S. C. Dharmage, B. Erbas, D. Jarvis, M. Wjst, C. Raherison, D. Norbäck, J. Heinrich, J. Sunyer, C. Svanes
European Respiratory Journal Feb 2009, 33 (2) 237-244; DOI: 10.1183/09031936.00062907

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Do childhood respiratory infections continue to influence adult respiratory morbidity?
S. C. Dharmage, B. Erbas, D. Jarvis, M. Wjst, C. Raherison, D. Norbäck, J. Heinrich, J. Sunyer, C. Svanes
European Respiratory Journal Feb 2009, 33 (2) 237-244; DOI: 10.1183/09031936.00062907
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