| Literature DB >> 27181343 |
Renan Marrichi Mauch1, Arthur Henrique Pezzo Kmit2, Fernando Augusto de Lima Marson2, Carlos Emilio Levy2, Antonio de Azevedo Barros-Filho2, José Dirceu Ribeiro2.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To review the literature addressing the relationship of growth and nutritional parameters with pulmonary function in pediatric patients with cystic fibrosis. DATA SOURCE: A collection of articles published in the last 15 years in English, Portuguese and Spanish was made by research in electronic databases - PubMed, Cochrane, Medline, Lilacs and Scielo - using the keywords cystic fibrosis, growth, nutrition, pulmonary function in varied combinations. Articles that addressed the long term association of growth and nutritional parameters, with an emphasis on growth, with pulmonary disease in cystic fibrosis, were included, and we excluded those that addressing only the relationship between nutritional parameters and cystic fibrosis and those in which the aim was to describe the disease. DATA SYNTHESIS: Seven studies were included, with a total of 12,455 patients. Six studies reported relationship between growth parameters and lung function, including one study addressing the association of growth parameters, solely, with lung function, and all the seven studies reported relationship between nutritional parameters and lung function.Entities:
Keywords: Crescimento; Cystic fibrosis; Fibrose cística; Growth; Lung/pathophysiology; Nutrition; Nutrição; Pulmão/fisiopatologia
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27181343 PMCID: PMC5176073 DOI: 10.1016/j.rpped.2015.12.002
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Rev Paul Pediatr ISSN: 0103-0582
Figure 1Method of research, screening, exclusion and inclusion of papers in the final analysis. No papers in Spanish and Portuguese were found.
Description of the studies included in the systematic review published before 2010, distributed by authorship, design, location, objective or hypothesis, main variables studied and main findings.
| Study | Design | Location | Objective | Variables analyzed | Main findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Zemel et al. (2000) | Cohort | Philadelphia, United States | To determine the relationship among growth, nutritional status and pulmonary function in cystic fibrosis patients over a 4 year period | Forced Expiratory Volume in 1 second (Percentage of predicted), Height for Age Z score, Weight for Age Z score, Body Mass Index, percentage of height-appropriate Body Weight | The |
| Konstan et al. (2003) | Longitudinal | Multicentric (United States and Canada) | To examine the relative roles of growth and nutritional status and clinical evidence of lung disease from age 3 to 6 years in determining pulmonary function at age 6 years | Weight For Age, Height for Age, Percentage of Ideal Body Weight, Body Mass Index, Forced Expiratory Volume in 1 second, Forced Vital Capacity | Weight For Age, Height For Age and Percentage of Ideal Body Weight were poorly associated with lung disease at age 3, but all were strongly associated with pulmonary function at age six |
| Peterson et al. (2003) | Longitudinal | Minneapolis, United States | To evaluate how the weight gain pattern of children with cystic fibrosis affects their pulmonary function development | Baseline height; height gain; weight gain | Children who had steady weight gain tended to experience greater increases in Forced Expiratory Volume in 1 second than children who experienced periodic losses in weight |
| Assael et al. (2009) | Longitudinal | Veneto Region, Italy | To find a correlation between growth and lung disease severity through childhood | Forced Expiratory Volume in 1 second, height gain | Lung disease severity correlated with delayed prepubertal and pubertal growth milestones. Peak height velocities were reduced in relation to the severity of the disease |
Description of the studies included in the systematic review published after 2010, distributed by authorship, design, location, objective or hypothesis, main variables studied and main findings.
| Study | Design | Location | Objective | Variables analyzed | Main findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Yen et al. (2013) | Prospective | Multicentric (United States) | To evaluate the relationship between nutritional status early in life and the timing and velocity of height growth, lung function, complications of cystic fibrosis, and survival | Body Mass Index, Forced Expiratory Volume in 1 second, Height for Age Percentile, Weight for Age Percentile | Weight for Age Percentile>10% at age 4 was associated with better lung function from ages 6-18. By age 18, patients with an age 4 WAP>50% suffered fewer acute pulmonary exacerbations |
| Woestenenk et al. (2014) | Longitudinal | Utrecht, The Netherlands | To measure the weight and height of children with cystic fibrosis from 2 to 10 years old and to investigate the relationship between these parameters and Forced Expiratory Volume in 1 second beginning at 6 years old | Forced Expiratory Volume in 1 second, Weight For Age, Height For Age, Height For Age (adjusted for Target Height), Weight For Height | The yearly decline in Forced Expiratory Volume in 1 second was significantly slowed in children who gained weight |
| Sanders et al. (2015) | Prospective | Multicentric (United States) | To characterize early life growth trajectories and to determine if these trajectories are associated with Forced Expiratory Volume in 1 second at ages 6-7 years | Forced Expiratory Volume in 1 second (Percentage of predicted), Weight For Length, Body Mass Index | Subjects with Weight For Length and Body Mass Index always>50th percentile had the highest Forced Expiratory Volume in 1 second (Percentage of predicted) predicted at age 6-7 years, significantly higher than subjects whose Weight For Length and Body Mass Index was stable or decreased>10 percentile points |