| Literature DB >> 33498858 |
Rita Amaral1,2,3,4, Cristina Jácome1,2, Rute Almeida1,2, Ana Margarida Pereira1,2,5, Magna Alves-Correia5, Sandra Mendes1, José Carlos Cidrais Rodrigues6, Joana Carvalho6, Luís Araújo5, Alberto Costa7, Armandina Silva7, Maria Fernanda Teixeira8, Manuel Ferreira-Magalhães2,8, Rodrigo Rodrigues Alves9, Ana Sofia Moreira10, Ricardo M Fernandes11, Rosário Ferreira11, Paula Leiria Pinto12, Nuno Neuparth12,13, Diana Bordalo14, Ana Todo Bom15, Maria José Cálix16, Tânia Ferreira17, Joana Gomes18, Carmen Vidal19, Ana Mendes11, Maria João Vasconcelos20, Pedro Morais Silva21, José Ferraz22, Ana Morête23, Claúdia Sofia Pinto24, Natacha Santos25, Claúdia Chaves Loureiro26, Ana Arrobas27, Maria Luís Marques28, Carlos Lozoya29, Cristina Lopes6,30, Francisca Cardia31, Carla Chaves Loureiro32, Raquel Câmara33, Inês Vieira34, Sofia da Silva35, Eurico Silva36, Natalina Rodrigues37, João A Fonseca1,2,5.
Abstract
We aimed to identify persistent asthma phenotypes among adolescents and to evaluate longitudinally asthma-related outcomes across phenotypes. Adolescents (13-17 years) from the prospective, observational, and multicenter INSPIRERS studies, conducted in Portugal and Spain, were included (n = 162). Latent class analysis was applied to demographic, environmental, and clinical variables, collected at a baseline medical visit. Longitudinal differences in clinical variables were assessed at a 4-month follow-up telephone contact (n = 128). Three classes/phenotypes of persistent asthma were identified. Adolescents in class 1 (n = 87) were highly symptomatic at baseline and presented the highest number of unscheduled healthcare visits per month and exacerbations per month, both at baseline and follow-up. Class 2 (n = 32) was characterized by female predominance, more frequent obesity, and uncontrolled upper/lower airways symptoms at baseline. At follow-up, there was a significant increase in the proportion of controlled lower airway symptoms (p < 0.001). Class 3 (n = 43) included mostly males with controlled lower airways symptoms; at follow-up, while keeping symptom control, there was a significant increase in exacerbations/month (p = 0.015). We have identified distinct phenotypes of persistent asthma in adolescents with different patterns in longitudinal asthma-related outcomes, supporting the importance of profiling asthma phenotypes in predicting disease outcomes that might inform targeted interventions and reduce future risk.Entities:
Keywords: adolescents; asthma; clustering; latent class analysis; longitudinal studies; phenotypes
Year: 2021 PMID: 33498858 PMCID: PMC7908090 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph18031015
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390