| Literature DB >> 27404386 |
Chantel D Sloan1, Tebeb Gebretsadik2,3, Christian Rosas-Salazar2,4, Pingsheng Wu2,3,5, Kecia N Carroll2,4, Edward Mitchel6, Larry J Anderson7, Emma K Larkin2,5, Tina V Hartert2,4,5.
Abstract
Rates of Sudden Unexplained Infant Death (SUID), bronchiolitis, and central apnea increase in winter in temperate climates. Though associations between these three conditions are suggested, more work is required to establish if there is a causal pathway linking bronchiolitis to SUID through inducing central apnea. Utilizing a large population-based cohort of infants studied over a 20-year period (n = 834,595, from birth years 1989-2009)), we analyzed ecological associations between timing of SUID cases, bronchiolitis, and apnea healthcare visits. Data were analyzed between 2013 and 2015. We used a Cox Proportional Hazards model to analyze possible interactions between maternal smoking and maternal asthma with infant bronchiolitis on time to SUID. SUID and bronchiolitis both occurred more frequently in winter. An increase in bronchiolitis clinical visits occurred within a few days prior to apnea visits. We found a temporal relationship between infant bronchiolitis and apnea. In contrast, no peak in SUID cases was seen during peaks of bronchiolitis. Among those without any bronchiolitis visits, maternal smoking was associated with an increased risk of SUID: Hazard Ratio (HR) of 2.38 (95% CI: 2.11, 2.67, p-value <0.001). Maternal asthma was associated with an increased risk of SUID among infants with at least one bronchiolitis visit: HR of 2.40 (95% CI: 1.04, 5.54, p-value = 0.04). Consistent trends between bronchiolitis, apnea, and SUID were not established due to small numbers of SUID cases. However, interaction analysis revealed potential differential associations of bronchiolitis and SUID by maternal smoking, maternal asthma status.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27404386 PMCID: PMC4942135 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0158521
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Maternal and Infant Characteristics by Sudden Unexplained Infant Death Status.
| Characteristic: | Total Population (N = 834,595) | Infants without SUID (N = 833,400) | Infants with SUID (N = 1,195) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Apnea | 8,139 | 8,129 | 10 (1%) | |
| Bronchiolitis | 162,607 | 162,548 | 59 (5%) | |
| Male | 427179 (51%) | 426470 (51%) | 709 (59%) | |
| Female | 407407 (49%) | 406921 (49%) | 486 (41%) | |
| White | 504842 (60%) | 504169 (60%) | 673 (56%) | |
| Black | 267794 (32%) | 267301 (32%) | 493 (41%) | |
| Other | 61959 (7%) | 61930 (7%) | 29 (3%) | |
| 22 [19,26] | 22 [19,26] | 21 [19,25] | ||
| 274 [267,281] | 274 [267,281] | 274 [258,281] | ||
| 3232 [2863,3555] | 3232 [2863,3556] | 2977 [2466,3320] | ||
| 114577 (14%) | 114278 (14%) | 299 (25%) | ||
| 228011 (27%) | 227436 (27%) | 575 (48%) | ||
| 26924 (8%) | 26874 (8%) | 50 (8%) |
The table presents characteristics for the population of infants born in the Tennessee Medicaid program from 1989–2009 (n = 834,595) by SUID vs. No SUID
aRepresents those with at least one apnea clinical visit
bRepresents those with at least one bronchiolitis clinical visit
cThere were very few infants missing data for the demographic variables (except for maternal asthma, as noted).
dThe maternal asthma variable had 329,483 infants with available data due to continuous enrollment criteria of no more than 45 days of non-enrollment.
Annualized rates of apnea or SUID by bronchiolitis or apnea visit status.
| No Bronchiolitis | Bronchiolitis | No Apnea | Apnea | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Rate | 12.34 (12.07, 12.61) | 44.5 (43.45,45.51) | NA | NA |
| Rate | 1.7 (1.6, 1.8) | 0.36 (0.28, 0.47) | 1.4 (1.36, 1.53) | 1.24 (0.59, 1.52) |
*Rates per 1,000 infant-years with exact 95% Poisson confidence intervals.
The table presents rates of apnea or SUID by two separate disease condition (bronchiolitis or apnea) comparisons that are not mutually exclusive groups.
Fig 1Percent of infants in the cohort with bronchiolitis, apnea and SUID events by birth years, 1989–2009.
a. Percent of infants in the cohort with bronchiolitis and apnea events increased over time. b. The percent of infants in the cohort who died of SUID decreased over time. A moving average smoothing technique was applied to help visualize long-term trends.
Fig 2Events chart of the timing of bronchiolitisa and apnea visits for all SUID cases (N = 1,195).
Events are ordered by time (days) from birth to death. The y-axis shows quantiles of infants by time to death from SUID. Red circles represent an apnea event, yellow triangles represent a bronchiolitis event, and gray squares represent death from SUID forming the end of the time course. aMultiple bronchiolitis health care encounters for an infant within a 7-day period were considered as a single bronchiolitis event. The time gap between bronchiolitis and SUID can be gauged from the x-axis of this figure.
Association of maternal smoking or maternal asthma with SUID outcome by infant bronchiolitis status, Cox Proportional Hazards model results.
| ≥ 1 bronchiolitis visit | No bronchiolitis visit | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| HR (95%CI) | P value | HR (95%CI) | P value | |
| Maternal smoking vs No* smoking | 1.51 (0.90, 2.53) | 0.12 | 2.38 (2.11, 2.67) | <0.001 |
| Maternal asthma vs No asthma **† | 2.40 (1.04, 5.54) | 0.040 | 1.11 (0.82, 1.52) | 0.50 |
aSeparate Cox Proportional Hazards regression models were conducted for maternal smoking and bronchiolitis and maternal asthma († for maternal asthma subset with data) and bronchiolitis interaction tests (P values for interactions 0.092* and 0.090**); covariates included for adjustments were infant sex, gestational age, birth weight, year of birth.