Deepa Rastogi1, Jason Lang2. 1. Children's National Medical Center, George Washington University School of Medicine and Health Sciences, Washington, DC; and. 2. Department of Pediatrics, Duke University School of Medicine, Durham, North Carolina.
Children with asthma around the world continue to suffer from
diminished quality of life and frequent hospitalizations (1). Despite extensive research, the exact environmental and
genetic mechanisms that give rise to childhood asthma remain poorly described. The
majority of pediatric asthma cases present roughly in the first 5 years of life,
suggesting that, in addition to genetics, in utero environmental
factors likely contribute (2). For example,
accumulating evidence suggests that maternal obesity during pregnancy, excessive
gestational weight gain (3), and early childhood
obesity are all closely linked and associate with development of childhood asthma (4–6). An estimated 25% of new asthma cases in obesechildren appear to be
attributable to obesity (6). However, there is a
lack of a clear understanding of the obesity-mediated mechanism(s) that underlie the
association of maternal obesity and incident childhood asthma.In this issue of AnnalsATS, Castro-Rodriguez and colleagues (pp.
1583–1589) address this gap in knowledge through an elegant study
involving participants in the Maternal Obesity and Asthma birth cohort (7). This registered study (NCT02903134) was
approved by the School of Medicine Ethics Committee of Pontificia Universidad Catolica
de Chile and analyzed clinical and environmental factors and leptin levels at birth and
age 30 months in more than 300 mothers and infants from the Hospital Sotero del Rio in
Santiago, Chile. The researchers compared the risk of asthma predictive index positivity
(definition of asthma risk) at 30 months of age according to maternal obesity status
using logistic regression models. They found a nonsignificantly increased prevalence of
asthma risk in infants born to obese mothers (16.8%) compared with those born to
normal-weight (12.2%) and overweight mothers (14.7%)
(P = 0.18). Offspring of obese mothers had higher
cord blood leptin compared with infants of nonobese mothers, but this difference did not
retain statistical significance at 30 months of age. Following adjusted analysis,
infants born to obese mothers with elevated cord blood leptin were found to have a 30%
increased asthma risk (adjusted odds ratio, 1.30; 95% confidence interval,
1.1–1.55; P = 0.003). Children of obese
mothers also had a higher prevalence of bronchiolitis at 30 months, although they did
not have more frequent neonatal complications or occurrence of atopic diseases by 30
months of age.There are several analytic strengths of this prospective cohort study. The researchers
used comprehensive longitudinal maternal and infant phenotyping, including gestational
medications, smoking, and environmental exposures, and blood collection at birth (cord)
and during infancy (30 mo), with detailed quantification of circulating immune and
metabolic measures and adipokines. Clinical phenotyping was done on all offspring
longitudinally in a concurrent manner every 6 months during infancy to age 30 months,
allowing clarity around the temporal sequence of leptin and asthma diagnosis. Their
design using concurrent (prospective) enrollment and comprehensive phenotyping also
avoids selection bias at enrollment and the examination of multiple effects of the
exposure of maternal obesity and cord leptin. Limitations of note include the fact that
30 months of age is a difficult time to reliably establish the diagnosis of persistent
childhood asthma. Because childhood asthma cases also present after 30 months and
reliable lung function testing is not yet feasible, significant false-positive and
-negative predictions may result. It is intriguing that the 30% risk is very similar to
the 25% risk found in a prior study that quantified the contribution of childhood
obesity to incident asthma (6). The limitation
of anthropometric data being available only for a small subset of infants limited the
ability to assess the role of childhood obesity in mediating asthma risk, as a potential
mechanism distinct from maternal obesity. Furthermore, the current study used a
surrogate for asthma that is skewed toward identification of atopic asthma, although
maternal obesity has been most closely associated with nonatopic asthma in offspring
(3). Although the study is prospective in
nature, observational studies of this kind without experimental manipulation are not
able to establish causality. Therefore, one may speculate that leptin may exist within
the mechanistic link connecting maternal obesity and asthma in offspring or it may
simply be associated with other obesity-related causal mechanisms.Leptin is known to be elevated in obese pregnant women and increases with gestational
weight gain (8). Being a proinflammatory
adipokine (9), leptin has been proposed to
underlie several maternal obesity–mediated complications in the offspring,
including immediate neonatal complications, such as sepsis and respiratory distress, and
long-term effects such as incident obesity, diabetes, and cardiovascular disease (10). The findings by Castro-Rodriguez and
colleagues (7) suggest a potential role of
leptin in incident asthma in the offspring of obesewomen. However, few studies,
primarily in murine models, have mechanistically linked leptin with neonatal or
long-term complications in children of obese mothers (10).From the perspective of pulmonary disease, leptin has many effects that may underlie the
observations reported by Castro-Rodriguez and colleagues (11). Although the proinflammatory effect of leptin is one of the
most commonly proposed mechanisms linking maternal obesity with neonatal and early
childhood diseases (9, 11) Castro-Rodriguez and colleagues did not find substantive
differences in immune markers among children born to obese as compared with
normal-weight women at birth or at the 30-month follow-up time point. This negative
finding highlights the need to investigate additional mechanisms that are mediated by
leptin. For instance, leptin has neural effects and was found to influence airway
caliber via cholinergic responses in murine models of obesity (12). Through its effect on pulmonary development (11), leptin may contribute to incident asthma by
promoting lung dysanapsis (i.e., delayed airway caliber development relative to lung
growth), proposed to be one of the explanations for pulmonary function deficits in obesechildren with asthma (13). Alternatively,
leptin may be a surrogate measure for a pathway distinct from its direct effects. For
example, leptin and insulin levels frequently correlate because leptin modulates satiety
(14). Insulin resistance has been
associated with pulmonary function deficits in both children and adults and mediates the
association of nonallergic immune responses with pulmonary function deficits (15). These myriad direct and indirect effects of
leptin highlight a need for mechanistic studies that investigate the specific and
distinct mechanism(s) that directly link leptin with incident asthma in children.Addressing the need for biomarkers to facilitate early identification of children at risk
to develop asthma, the study by Castro-Rodriguez and colleagues, in conjunction with the
prior literature, supports consideration of leptin as a biomarker of respiratory issues
in offspring of obese mothers. Prior cross-sectional studies have linked leptin with
asthma and pulmonary function deficits in children (16). The longitudinal finding from this study is suggestive of a causal
link, although replicate work is needed (7).
However, for convincing consideration of leptin as a biomarker, future studies that
validate the links between maternal/cord blood leptin and incident asthma in childhood
will benefit from investigation of the independent contribution of the child’s
body weight and inclusion of a mechanistic component investigating the mechanisms and
pathways by which leptin may cause airway disease in children of obese mothers.
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