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Risk
Factors for Asthma and Allergy Associated
with Urban Migration: Background and
Methodology of a Cross-Sectional Study in
Afro-Ecuadorian School Children in
Northeastern Ecuador (Esmeraldas-SCAALA Study)
Philip J
Cooper1,2,
Martha E
Chico1,
Maritza G
Vaca1,
Alejandro
Rodriguez1,
Neuza M
Alcântara-Neves3,
Bernd
Genser4,
Lain Pontes
de Carvalho5,
Renato T
Stein6,
Alvaro A
Cruz7,
Laura C
Rodrigues8 and
Mauricio L
Barreto4
1Instituto
de Microbiologia, Universidad San Francisco
de Quito, Quito, Ecuador, 2Centre
for Infection, St George's University of
London, London, UK, 3Instituto de
Ciências da Saúde, Universidade Federal de
Bahia, Salvador, Brazil, 4Instituto
de Saúde Coletiva, Universidade Federal de
Bahia, Brazil, 5Centro de
Pesquisas Gonçalo Moniz – FIOCRUZ, Salvador,
Brazil, 6Department of
Pediatrics, School of Medicine, Pontifica
Universidade Católica, Porto Alegre, Brazil,
7Centro de Enfermidades
Respiratórias, Faculdade de Medicina,
Universidade Federal de Bahia, Salvador,
Brazil, 8London School of Hygiene
and Tropical Medicine, London, UK
BMC Pulmonary
Medicine 2006, 6:24doi:10.1186/1471-2466-6-24 © 2006 Cooper et al;
licensee BioMed Central Ltd.
This is an Open Access article distributed
under the terms of the Creative Commons
Attribution License ,
which permits unrestricted use,
distribution, and reproduction in any
medium, provided the original work is
properly cited. |
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Background
Asthma and
allergic diseases are becoming
increasingly frequent in children in urban centres of Latin America although the
prevalence of allergic disease is still low
in rural areas. Understanding better why the
prevalence of asthma is greater in urban
migrant populations and the role of risk
factors such as life style and environmental
exposures, may be key to understand what is
behind this trend.
Methods/Design
The Esmeraldas-SCAALA (Social Changes,
Asthma and Allergy in Latin America) study
consists of cross-sectional and nested
case-control studies of school children in
rural and urban areas of Esmeraldas Province
in Ecuador. The cross-sectional study will
investigate risk factors for atopy and
allergic disease in rural and migrant urban
Afro-Ecuadorian school children and the
nested case-control study will examine
environmental, biologic and social risk
factors for asthma among asthma
cases and
non-asthmatic controls from the
cross-sectional study. Data will be
collected through standardised
questionnaires, skin prick testing to
relevant aeroallergen extracts, stool
examinations for parasites, blood sampling
(for measurement of IgE, interleukins and
other immunological parameters),
anthropometric measurements for assessment
of nutritional status, exercise testing for
assessment of exercise-induced bronchospasm
and dust sampling for measurement of
household endotoxin and allergen levels.
Discussion
The information will be used to identify
the factors associated with an increased
risk of
asthma and
allergies in migrant and
urbanizing populations, to improve the
understanding of the causes of the increase
in asthma prevalence and to identify
potentially modifiable factors to inform the
design of prevention programs to reduce
the risk of allergy in urban populations in
Latin America.
Transfer Factor
helps your immune
system to function properly.
Background
Large increases in the prevalence of
asthma and allergic diseases have been
reported in industrialized countries during
the last twenty to thirty years [1,2],
although there is evidence that the observed
increase in asthma has reached a plateau in
some industrialized countries [3,4].
There is strong evidence for differences in
the prevalence of allergic diseases between
urban and rural areas in Europe and in
non-industrialized countries, with higher prevalences of
allergic diseases reported in
urban areas [5-7].
Allergic diseases are caused by a complex
interaction between host genetics and
environmental exposures. Temporal trends in
allergy prevalence in developed countries [4],
and the differences in allergy risk between
urban and rural populations of the same
ethnicity in developing countries [8],
indicate that changes in environmental
exposure rather than genetic factors are the
most likely explanation for these
epidemiological observations.
Rural residence is consistently
identified as the strongest protective
factor against asthma in epidemiological
studies [7,9]
and is likely to be associated with
environmental exposures such as life style,
diet, and hygiene [3,4,10].
Numerous epidemiological studies have
provided evidence that migration from
countries of low asthma prevalence
(non-industrialized countries) to those of
high asthma prevalence (industrialized
countries) is associated with an increased
risk of allergic disease [11-14],
but the environmental factors that determine
this have not been identified. There are few
published studies of allergic diseases among
migrant populations within
non-industrialized countries [8]
that migrate from low-risk rural areas to
high-risk urban areas.
Changes in exposures to many different
environmental and life style factors are
likely to occur in populations that migrate
from rural to urban areas, and studies of
migrants to urban areas and comparisons of
environmental exposures with the original
rural and with more established urban
populations should allow the effects of
environmental exposures in early life (e.g.
causing immune programming) on
allergy risk
to be distinguished from the effects of
current exposures. Clarification of the
dynamics behind the causation of
allergy and
asthma in urban migrant populations will
further improve our understanding of what is
behind the increase of frequency of these
diseases with urbanization and
westernization. The identification of
modifiable risk factors could lead to new
public health initiatives to reduce the
burden of allergic disease among urbanizing
populations.
Latin American countries are undergoing a
rapid process of population change that
includes urbanization, migration, economic
development and adoption of a "modern"
lifestyle. Among the burgeoning urban
populations of Ecuador and other Latin
American countries, asthma and allergic
diseases are perceived to be an increasingly
important public health problem of children
[15], although there is
limited data quantifying the magnitude of
the problem and the associated risk factors.
The International Study of Asthma and
Allergies in Childhood (ISAAC) compared the
prevalence of allergic disease in school-age
children using a standardized questionnaire
and found that urban centres in Latin
America have among the highest rates of
allergic symptoms worldwide [16].
School children living in rural areas of
Ecuador appear to have very low risks of
allergic disease [17].
Current trends of continuing rural-urban
migration, coupled with the large expected
increases in the urban population of Ecuador
over the next 10 years, make it likely that
allergic diseases, including asthma, will
become a significant public health problem
in the future.
The study described here is part of the
Programme "Social Change, Asthma and
Allergy
in Latin America" (SCAALA), a research
programme being conducted in Ecuador and
Brazil (in the North Eastern city of
Salvador), funded by The Wellcome Trust as
part of the programme of Major Awards to
Centres of Excellence in Latin America. The
SCAALA collaboration aims to clarify the
social and biological mechanisms that
mediate the effect of population and
lifestyle changes on the frequency of atopic
diseases. This paper deals with the
methodological aspects of the study being
conducted in Ecuador.
The study in Ecuador aims to study
changes in the prevalence and risk factors
for asthma and
allergy in populations that
migrate from rural to urban areas and
examine how such changes may relate to
changes in the risk of atopic disease. The
study will measure the frequency of symptoms
of asthma, allergic rhinitis and
atopic
dermatitis in school children in urban and
rural areas, and will collect detailed
information on life style factors and
environmental exposures that may affect the
frequency of atopic diseases in the urban
and rural environments. The study will
investigate also changes in key immunologic
factors (i.e. cytokines) and environmental
exposures (i.e. exposure to aeroallergens in
the household) that may be associated with
altered asthma risk in the rural and urban
study groups. On the other hand, the SCAALA
study in Brazil aims to investigate the
associations between the prevalence and
incidence of allergic diseases,
environmental exposures, particularly
hygiene-related exposures, and immunological
parameters in a cohort of children in the
city of Salvador in the State of Bahia, and
has been described elsewhere [18].
Methods/Design
Ecuador is among the poorest of South
American countries, with an estimated per
capita GDP of US$4,300 in 2005 and
industrialization that is far less advanced
compared to richer countries in the region,
such as Chile (GDP per capita, US$11,300 and
Argentina (GDP per capita, US$13,100) [19].
In Ecuador, the process of industrial
development accelerated from the 1970s as a
consequence of revenues available from oil
exploitation in the Eastern forest region.
Industrial development has been associated
with a high rate of population growth in the
cities, estimated to be 2.5% annually in
2000 [20]. There have
been large increases in the urban proportion
of Ecuador's population that rose from 42%
to 65% during the period 1975 to 2000 and is
projected to reach 76% by 2015 [20].
The new urban centres are home to 50% of the
country's poor [20].
Study Site
The study is based in Ecuador's northern
coastal province, Esmeraldas Province. The
Province covers an area of 15,237 km2
and has a population of approximately
429,000. The main economic activities are
oil industry, tourism, timber extraction,
and African palm oil. The principal city in
the Province is Esmeraldas, with a
population of 250,566 that is home to
approximately 80% of the Ecuador's
Afro-Ecuadorian population [21].
Esmeraldas Province is one of the poorest
regions of Ecuador, with a per capita income
that is less than half the national average.
An estimated 70% of the economically active
population in the city of Esmeraldas is
unemployed or under-employed, and 60% have
no access to basic services such as
electricity, drinking water and sanitation [21].
Over the past 30 years there have been large
migrations of Afro-Ecuadorians from rural
areas of the Province to the city of
Esmeraldas, largely as a consequence of
displacement by African palm oil plantations
and by migrants from other Provinces. The
comparison of environmental exposures
between Afro-Ecuadorians that continue to
live in a rural environment with those (of
the same genetic 'stock') that have migrated
from the same rural environment to live in
an urban environment provides an important
opportunity to investigate how changes in
environmental and life style factors that
follow urban migration may contribute to
changes in allergy risk.
Study
Population
The study will be conducted among school
children attending rural schools in
Afro-Ecuadorian communities in the District
of Eloy Alfaro, in a tropical coastal area
of Esmeraldas Province, and in marginal
Afro-Ecuadorian 'barrios' in an urban
centre, where migrants from the rural area
(called norteños) congregate.
Study
Design
The study forms two parts: (i) a
cross-sectional study of environmental
factors associated with atopy and allergic
symptoms in school-age children in the rural
District of Eloy Alfaro in Esmeraldas
Province and in 'barrios' of the city of
Esmeraldas where rural migrants congregate;
and (ii) a nested case-control study of
environmental risk factors for
asthma using
asthma cases identified from the
cross-sectional study in urban and rural
school children and a random sample of
non-asthmatic controls.
1. Cross-sectional study
A total of 4,000 school children, aged 7
to 15 years, living in the District of Eloy
Alfaro and 2,500 children of the same age
range, living in the city of Esmeraldas,
will be assessed to estimate the frequency
of atopy and allergic diseases, including
asthma, rhinitis and eczema, and identify
and compare risk factors associated with
these outcomes in urban and rural study
populations. School children in urban areas
will be defined by place of birth, period of
residence in urban area and at what age, and
whether their parents are migrants (i.e.
born in a rural area) or not. The
cross-sectional study will examine the
relationship between atopy and allergic
symptoms in urban and rural school children
and the environmental factors that modify
this relationship.
2. Nested case-control study
Asthma cases (200 cases in each of the
urban and rural areas) and non-asthmatic
controls (800 controls in each of the rural
and urban areas), respectively, will be
identified from the results of an
allergy
symptom questionnaire performed in the
cross-sectional study by the questions –
"Have you had wheezing or whistling in the
chest in the last 12 months? " and "Have you
ever had wheezing or whistling in the chest
at any time in the past?" Non-asthmatic
controls will be randomly selected from all
children in each of the urban and rural
areas that respond negatively to the second
question. Nested case-control studies in the
urban and rural areas will identify risk
factors associated with symptoms of recent
wheeze using both quantitative and
qualitative epidemiological methods,
investigations of immunological function and
measurements of allergens and endotoxin in
the environment.
Sample
Size and Study Power
Data are available for the prevalence of
recent wheeze in urban and rural study
areas, from pilot surveys of 245 and 536
school children, respectively. These surveys
estimate the prevalence of recent wheeze to
be greater in the urban area (urban 13.4%
versus rural 7.3%). The prevalence of atopy
was similar in urban and rural school
children (urban 11.3% vs. rural 13.5%). A
sample of 4,000 children in the rural area
and 2,500 children in the urban area will
provide approximately 820 cases of atopy for
the cross-sectional study, and 292 and 335
cases of asthma for the case-control study
in the rural and urban areas, respectively.
Two hundred asthma cases from each area will
be recruited into case-control studies
(allowing a drop-out rate of ~ 30%). The
study will have a case-control ratio of 1:4
(400 cases vs. 1,600 controls). With a study
power of 80% and P < 0.05, the nested
case-control studies combined (i.e. urban
and rural) will be able to detect
significant effects on asthma of common
exposures (prevalences of 40–60% – e.g.
geohelminth infections and household pets)
with OR<0.7 and rare exposures (10%, e.g.
family history of allergic disease) with
OR<0.5. Likewise, the individual
case-control studies (i.e. urban vs. rural)
with the same power and level of
significance will be able to detect an
effect of OR<0.6 for common exposures
(40–60% prevalence), and OR<0.4 for rare
exposures (10%).
Main
Exposures and Definitions
Asthma, rhinitis and eczema will be
defined according to the core allergy
symptom questions of the International Study
of Allergy and Asthma in Childhood (ISAAC) [22].
Atopy will be defined as a positive skin
prick test to any of the panel of
aeroallergens tested. Allergy will be
defined by the presence of a history of
appropriate symptoms of a clinical allergic
condition (asthma, rhinitis or eczema) in
the presence of atopy [23].
Information on important risk factors and
environmental exposures that affect the risk
of atopy and asthma will be collected as
listed in Table
1.
Table 1. Variables
to be collected in the cross-sectional
and nested case-control studies
Data Collection and Instruments
1. Questionnaires
A.
Cross-sectional study: The
questionnaire has been modified from the
ISAAC Phase II study questionnaire [24],
and has been translated into Spanish and
extensively field tested [17,25]).
The questionnaire includes the core
allergy
symptoms questions of ISAAC and will collect
information on maternal and paternal
educational level and occupation; house
construction; family possession of material
goods; family income; cooking materials;
access to water, electricity, and
sanitation; household crowding; exposures to
pets and animals; exposures to farming,
including consumption of unpasteurized milk;
dietary questionnaire; physical activity and
time spent watching television; number of
siblings and birth order; breast feeding;
day care attendance; family history of
allergic disease; exposure to smoking;
detailed history of residence in urban and
rural areas of father and mother; and
detailed history of residence in urban and
rural areas of child. The questionnaire will
be administered to the parent or guardian of
each child by trained field workers in the
presence of the child.
B. Case-control study: A
questionnaire for a more detailed history of
asthma, rhinitis and eczema symptoms, based
on the ISAAC phase II supplementary
questionnaires [24], will
be used. The questionnaire is designed to
distinguish between asthma and other common
respiratory disorders. The questionnaire
includes also questions of the management of
asthma [24] and of risk
factors for asthma. The case-control study
will include qualitative epidemiological
techniques to assess knowledge, attitudes,
and practice about asthma (KAP
questionnaire). KAP questionnaires will be
administered to the parents of asthma cases
and non-asthmatic controls and also to
health care personnel in health centres in
urban and rural areas. Deep interviews with
key informants in urban barrios and rural
communities, focus groups and other
qualitative epidemiological techniques will
be used to evaluate relevant lifestyle
factors, and how different patterns between
urban and rural areas may contribute to risk
(e.g. factors that are protective in rural
areas, such as rearing of livestock, may be
risk factors in urban areas as recent
migrants 'ruralise' their urban
environment).
2. Exercise Test
The presence of exercise-induced
bronchospasm (EIB) will be assessed in all
children in the case-control as described
previously [25,26].
Briefly, peak expiratory flow rate (PEFR) is
measured before and after 6 minutes of
vigorous exercise and a fall of 15% in PEFR
is considered to indicate EIB.
3.
Nutritional Assessment
Finger prick blood samples will be
collected from all subjects in the
cross-sectional study to estimate hemoglobin
level using standard procedures.
Anthropometric measurements will be
performed using standardised methodology and
will include weight (kg), height (cm) and
triceps skin fold thickness (mm). z-scores
for weight-for-age, weight-for-height and
height-for-age will be calculated using the
EPINUT program (Epi Info 6.0; CDC. Atlanta,
GA, USA).
4.
Examination of Stool Samples for Parasites
Single stool samples will be collected
from all children and examined using the
modified Kato-Katz and formol-ether
concentration methods [27].
Intestinal helminth parasite burdens
(Kato-Katz) will be quantified as eggs per
gram of faeces. Infections with protozoan
pathogens (formol-ether concentration) will
be graded as positive or negative. All
children with intestinal helminth infections
will be offered appropriate treatments with
albendazole and children with trophozoites
of Entamoeba histolytica (with
ingested red cells) and Giardia
intestinalis will be offered
appropriate doses of tinidazole.
5.
Examination of Dust Samples
Dust samples will be collected from the
homes of the children in the case-control
study using a ~ 1200 W vacuum cleaner,
weighed and stored as described previously [18].
Surveys of mites in dust samples and of
cockroaches in houses in the rural area show
a predominance (>90%) of both
Dermatophagoides pteronyssinus mite and
the American cockroach,
Periplaneta
americana. Dust samples will be
analyzed for endotoxin and fungal
β-glucans
(Limulus lysate assay, BioWhittaker, MD,
USA) and allergens from D. pteronyssinus
(Der p 1) and P. americana
(Per a 1) (Indoor Biotechnologies, VA, USA).
6. Examination of
Blood Samples
Blood samples (7 mL) will be collected by
venipuncture from participants in the
case-control study and will be used for
obtaining serum for the measurement of:
polyclonal IgE [28]; IgE
antibodies specific for
D. pteronyssinus,
American cockroach, and Ascaris
lumbricoides using the Pharmacia CAP
system (Phadia AB, Uppsala, Sweden); IgG
antibodies specific for hepatitis A virus,
Helicobacter pylori,
herpes simplex
virus,
herpes zoster virus, Epstein-Barr
virus, and Toxoplasma gondii using
commercially available assays; and for whole
blood cultures stimulated with mitogen and
relevant allergens for the measurement of
the regulatory cytokines, IFN-γ,
IL-13, and IL-10, as described elsewhere [18].
A whole blood pellet sample will be stored
at -40°C and shipped frozen to Imperial
College, London, UK, for genotyping of
single nucleotide polymorphisms using the
Sequenom system (Sequenom Inc, San Diego,
CA, USA), as described previously [24].
7. Allergen
Skin Prick Testing
All children in the cross-sectional study
will be tested for immediate
hypersensitivity responses to relevant
aeroallergens as described previously [25,28].
A positive test will be taken as a wheal
with a mean diameter of at least 3 mm
greater than the saline control 15 minutes
after pricking the allergen into the right
forearm using an ALK Lancet (ALK-Abello,
Horsholm, Denmark). The following allergens
from Greer Laboratories Inc (Lenoir, NC,
USA) will be tested:
D. pteronyssinus/D.
farinae mix, American cockroach,
Alternaria tenuis, cat, dog, '9
Southern grass mix', and 'New stock fungi
mix' .
Overview of
Statistical Plan of Analysis
The analysis will be designed to address
five principal study questions: 1) What is
the frequency of atopy and
asthma in school
children from the rural and urban study
areas? 2) What environmental exposures are
associated with atopy and asthma and how do
these interact with area of residence (rural
vs. urban) to affect the relationship
between atopy and wheeze symptoms? 3) Do
environmental exposures associated with
wheeze differ between migrant and
established urban populations and, if so,
are they potentially modifiable through
intervention programmes? 4) Are place of
birth (rural vs. urban) and/or period of
residence in rural and urban areas
associated with risk of
allergy? 5) How do
complex inter-relationships between factors
at different levels (e.g. immunologic
factors and social factors) interact to
affect the risk of asthma in urban and rural
populations? Statistical analysis will be
conducted according to a conceptual
framework that defines a proposed causal
pathway and the complex analytic approach to
be used has been described in detail in a
companion paper [18].
Methods (epidemiological and laboratory
measurements) have been standardized between
the Salvador-SCAALA [18]
and this study (Esmeraldas-SCAALA), a
procedure that will permit comparisons
between the two studies, and may allow the
identification of common risk/protective
factors as well as those that are peculiar
to the different study sites.
Ethical
Considerations
Ethical approval for the study has been
obtained from the Hospital Pedro Vicente
Maldonado, Provincia de Pichincha, Ecuador.
Written informed consent to participate in
the study will be obtained from the parent
of each child and signed minor assent will
be obtained from each child. The parent or
guardian of each child will be provided with
a copy of all laboratory results and if,
appropriate, treatment recommendations will
be made by a trained clinician that will
review each case.
Discussion
Atopic asthma and other
allergic diseases
are becoming increasingly important public
health problems in Latin American cities and
there is little published information on the
causes of this disease epidemic. The SCAALA
(Social Change, Asthma and Allergy in Latin
America) research initiative includes two
epidemiological studies being conducted in
urbanizing populations (Esmeraldas Province,
Ecuador and the city of Salvador in Brazil,
respectively) that are investigating the
environmental causes of allergy in urban
Latin America and the biological and social
mechanisms that underlie these
epidemiological trends. While the SCAALA-Salvador
aims to investigate the associations between
the prevalence of asthma and other allergic
diseases (rhinitis, atopic eczema) and
potential risk factors that includes living
conditions and early life and current
exposures to infections [18],
the SCAALA-Esmeraldas study aims to study
frequency of atopy and allergic diseases and
exposure to potential risk factor in rural
populations and in migrants from rural to
urban areas and examine how these may
explain the risk of atopic diseases in
migrants from rural to urban areas. Both
studies will investigate how the association
between environment factors, allergic
diseases and markers of atopy (i.e.
skin-prick test and total and specific serum
IgE levels) may be mediated by interleukins
from antigen-stimulated leukocytes.
The Esmeraldas-SCAALA study in Ecuador
includes cross-sectional and nested
case-control studies conducted in rural and
urban contexts. The studies are
investigating the impact of urban migration
on asthma risk and the environmental
exposures that are associated with an
increased risk of asthma in populations that
migrate from rural to urban areas. The study
will focus on a single ethnic cultural
group, Afro-Ecuadorians, that traditionally
has lived in the remote rural North Eastern
region of Esmeraldas Province, but that has
migrated in significant numbers over the
past 30 years to cities such as the
provincial capital, Esmeraldas. The study of
a single and easily identifiable group that
presumably shares the same genetic 'stock'
and that has migrated locally (within the
same Province) should allow important
environmental risk factors to be identified
more easily and should not suffer from the
biases that limit the interpretation of
studies that have investigated populations
that have migrated between countries.
Specifically, the study, by investigating a
migrant population, will distinguish between
the effects of early life exposures
(inducing immune programming) and current
exposures in determining allergy risk.
The knowledge generated from this study
will help to define the size of the public
health problem of
allergy in Ecuador and may
identify possible environmental exposures
that could be considered for primary
prevention public health strategies. The
study in Brazil is a prospective study
investigating the effects of early life
exposures to environmental factors, and the
potential effects of these on the
immune
system and the risk of allergy and has been
described in detail in a separate paper [18].
The causes of the
allergy epidemic in
Latin America are assumed to be multifactorial and an important strength of
the SCAALA studies is the use of similar
causal frameworks and the sharing of
methodology and expertise in a wide range of
scientific disciplines (e.g. epidemiology,
immunology, microbiology, biostatistics and
social sciences). The two studies are
complementary and are likely to yield
important information on the underlying
causes of the allergy epidemic in urban
Latin America.
In summary, the aim of the proposed
programme is to investigate the biological
and social mechanisms that underlie the
epidemic of allergic diseases in urban Latin
America. Urbanization and the health
problems associated with this phenomenon
probably represent the single most important
challenge for health researchers working in
developing countries in the 21st
century, and allergic diseases are likely to
emerge as the most prevalent of chronic
diseases of childhood in Latin America
during this century. Latin America
urbanization has its roots on the intense
process of displacement of the poor rural
population that move to the urban centres
looking for work and other improvements in
their life conditions. It is expected that
the knowledge generated from the SCAALA
studies will help identify public health
interventions that may ameliorate the
adverse effects of urbanization on the
prevalence and severity of
asthma and
allergic diseases.
Abbreviations
ISAAC: International Study of
Asthma and
Allergies in Childhood
SCAALA: Social Change,
Asthma and Allergy
in Latin America
Competing
Interests
The author(s) declare that they have no
competing interests.
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helps your immune
system to function properly.

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Authors'
Contributions
PJC and LCR had the original idea for the
study. PJC designed the study and drafted
the manuscript. MC, MV were involved in
study design and co-ordination. NAN and LPC
were responsible for the immunological
methods. BG was responsible for the
statistical analysis plan. LR, AR, AC, RS
and MB were involved in study design. All
authors helped draft the manuscript, and
read and approved the final version of the
manuscript.
Acknowledgements
This study is funded by the Wellcome
Trust, UK, HCPC Latin American Centres of
Excellence Programme (ref 072405/Z/03/Z).
Transfer factor
helps your immune system to work
properly by educating them.
Find out more
about transfer factor and how it works.
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Table 1
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|
Variables to be collected in the cross-sectional and nested case-control studies |
|
Cross-sectional |
Case-control |
|
| Allergy questions |
|
|
| Core asthma symptom questions (ISAAC phase II) |
X |
X |
| Core rhinitis symptom questions (ISAAC phase II) |
X |
X |
| Core eczema symptom questions (ISAAC phase II) |
X |
X |
| Supplementary asthma questions (ISAAC phase II) |
|
X |
| Asthma management questions (ISAAC phase II) |
|
X |
| Rhinitis management questions (ISAAC phase II) |
|
X |
| Eczema management questions (ISAAC phase II) |
|
X |
| Knowledge attitude practice questions (KAP) |
|
X |
|
|
|
| Demographic and socio-economic |
|
|
| Sex |
X |
X |
| Age |
X |
X |
| Race |
X |
X |
| On socio-economic level: |
|
|
| parental schooling |
X |
|
| parental occupation |
X |
X |
| domestic goods |
X |
X |
| monthly income |
X |
X |
|
|
|
| Environmental factors |
|
|
| Sanitation and water supply |
X |
X |
| Does the house have electricity? |
X |
X |
| Pets |
|
|
| Has the child ever had a cat or dog living in the house? |
X |
|
| Does the child have a cat or dog living in the house currently? |
X |
X |
| Presence of animals outside household |
X |
X |
| Indoor smoking |
X |
X |
| Exposure to a farming environment |
X |
X |
| Housing (e.g.
construction, number of rooms) |
X |
X |
| Presence of allergens in dust (mites and cockroach) |
|
X |
| Presence of endotoxin in the house |
|
X |
| Cooking materials |
X |
X |
|
|
|
| Maternal and family related factors |
|
|
| Maternal smoking during pregnancy |
X |
|
| Asthma and other allergic diseases in the family |
X |
|
| | |