| Literature DB >> 30808315 |
K Meyer1, A Volkmann2, M Hufnagel3, E Schachinger4, S Klau2, J Horstmann4, R Berner5, M Fischer6, A Lehner6, N Haas6, S Ulrich6, A Jakob6.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: In Kawasaki disease (KD), a vasculitis of unknown etiology, the most serious complication is the development of coronary artery aneurysm (CAA). To date, the exact pathomechanism of KD is unknown. Both environmental and genetic factors seem to be associated with the development of the disease.Entities:
Keywords: Breast feeding; Coronary artery aneurysm; Kawasaki disease; Risk factors; Vitamin D supplementation
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30808315 PMCID: PMC6390341 DOI: 10.1186/s12887-019-1438-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Pediatr ISSN: 1471-2431 Impact factor: 2.125
Fig. 1Study population. *2012 ≤ 4 years of age: n = 189, 2013/2014 ≤ 17 years of age: n = 442
Fig. 2Scatterplot - Matching KD and control cases by age at the onset of fever in KD cases. One dot meets a matched pair. Dots that are below the red line were excluded. It is noticeable that most dots are on or next to the diagonal. Consequently, a successful matching based on age can be assumed
Fig. 3Matching: Geographical distribution of KD patients and their controls within Germany. We have created a map of Germany with the software MATLAB. Shapefiles, a file format containing geodata from the Database of Global Administrative Areas were used to extract the administrative boundaries in Germany. The individual postcodes were assigned to the respective federal state
Measures of association for the matching factors sex, age and place of residence
| Matching factors | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Sex | Age | Place of residence | |
| Measures of association | |||
| Phi coefficient | 0.706 | ||
| Contingency coefficient | 0.577 | 0.945 | 0.945 |
| Cramer’s V | 0.706 | 0.961 | 0.961 |
| Pearson correlation coefficient | 0.901 | ||
Clinical details of KD vs. control cases
| KD cases | Control cases | |
|---|---|---|
| ( | ( | |
| Age in yearsa | ||
| Median | 6.5 | 6.3 |
| Sex, n (%) | ||
| Female | 114 (37) | 137 (42) |
| Male | 194 (63) | 189 (58) |
| KD diagnosis, n (%) | ||
| Complete | 269 | n.a. |
| Incomplete with laboratory changes b | 15 | n.a. |
| Incomplete with CAA | 24 | n.a. |
| Days until start of IVIG therapy | ||
| Average | 6.6 | n.a. |
| Min – max | 0–32 | n.a. |
| Refractory to IVIG treatment c | ||
| Yes > 1 IVIG cycle | 29 (13.4%) | n.a. |
| Therapy with steroids, n (%) | ||
| Yes, for KD treatment | 53 (17.2) | n.a. |
| Yes, for other reasons | 9 (2.9) | n.a. |
| CAA in acute phase, n (%) | ||
| Yes | 36 (11.6) | n.a. |
| CAA after one year c, n (%) | ||
| Yes | 13 (5.9) | n.a. |
aat the end of the case-control study survey (i.e, March 22, 2017)
b according to the guidelines of the American Heart Association at least three other abnormal supplemental laboratory findings, namely (1) increased alanine transaminase, (2) albumin ≤3.0 g/dL, (3) leukocyturia, (4) anaemia for age, (5) leukocytosis (≥15,000/mm3) (6) thrombocytosis (≥450,000/mm3) [16]
cfor cases reported in 2013/2014 n = 217; CAA = coronary artery aneurysma; n.a. = not applicable
Demographic characteristics of KD and control cases and potential perinatal factors for KD development (frequencies, means and logistic regression with p-value, OR and 95% CI)
| KD cases | Control cases | Conditional logit – model ( | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| OR [95% CI] | ||||
| Duration of pregnancy in weeks | ||||
| Average (±SD) | 39 (±2.057) | 39 (±1.944) | 0.992 [0.891–1.105] | 0.891 |
| Parturitiona, n (%) | ||||
| Vaginal | 128 (65.6) | 194 (70.8) | 1 (reference) | 0.388 |
| Cesarean section | 67 (34.4) | 80 (29.2) | 1.286 [0.727–2.274] | |
| Birth weight in gram | ||||
| Average (±SD) | 3340 (±527.052) | 3383 (±537.734) | 0.999 [0.999–1.000] | 0.715 |
| Range | 1560 – 4960 | 1171 – 4910 | ||
| Duration of breastfeeding, n (%) | ||||
| < 2 weeks | 66 (21.4) | 30 (9.2) | 1 (reference) | 0.013 |
| > 2 weeksb | 242 (78.6) | 296 (90.8) | 0.471 [0.260–0.853] | |
| Vitamin D supplementation in the first year of life, n (%) | ||||
| No | 64 (20.8) | 53 (16.3) | 1 (reference) | 0.782 |
| Yes | 244 (79.2) | 273 (83.7) | 0.926 [0.537–1.595] | |
| Duration of vitamin D supplementation in the first year of life in months | ||||
| Mean (±SD) | 5.16 (±5.749) | 6.03 (±5.596) | 0.964 [0.931–0.998] | 0.039 |
| Regularity of vitamin D supplementationc, n (%) | ||||
| Irregular | 65 (26.6) | 55 (20.0) | 1 (reference) | 0.042 |
| Regular | 179 (73.4) | 220 (80.0) | 0.559 [0.319–0.980] | |
a not asked in n = 52 control cases vs. n = 113 KD cases, b includes partially breastfed children. crefers only to cases that received vitamin D
Influence of vitamin D supplementation and breastfeeding on the course of disease
| Vitamin D supplementation | Breastfeeding | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 0–6 months | 7–12 months |
| < 2 weeks | > 2 weeks |
| |
| CAA, n (%) | ||||||
| Yes | 13 (11.4) | 23 (11.9) |
| 5 (7.6) | 31 (12.8) |
|
| No | 101 (88.6) | 171 (88.1) | 61 (92.4) | 211 (87.2) | ||
| Refractory to IVIGa, n (%) | ||||||
| Yes | 9 (11.5) | 20 (14.5) |
| 4 (8.7) | 25 (14.7) |
|
| No | 69 (88.5) | 119 (85.5) | 42 (91.3) | 145 (85.3) | ||
| Laboratory, average (±SD) | ||||||
| CRP b | 93,55 | 105,08 |
| 103,04 | 100,20 |
|
| Thrombocytes c | 235.48 | 210.95 |
| 570.56 | 577.64 |
|
| Leukocytes d | 17.44 | 17.31 |
| 17.23 | 17.39 |
|
a only KD patients from 2013/2014 n = 217; b in mg/dl; c in T/μl; d in T/μl
Influence of vitamin D supplementation and breastfeeding on disease onset
| Age in months a (±SD) | Wilcoxon rank | Spearman correlation coefficient | |
|---|---|---|---|
| (n = 308 b) | p-value | ||
| Regularity of vitamin D supplementation c | |||
| Irregular | 34.95 (±24.329) | 0.534 | |
| Regular | 35.56 (±26.592) | ||
| Duration of vitamin D supplementation in the first year of life in months | |||
| 0–6 | 39.04 (±26.90) | −0.095 | |
| 7–12 | 34.95 (±26.07) | ||
| Duration of breastfeeding d | |||
| < 2 weeks | 36.14 (±23.691) | 0.802 | |
| > 2 weeks c | 36.51 (±27.093) | ||
a at onset of fever, b only KD cases, c refers only to cases that got vitamin D (n = 244), d includes partially breastfed cases