With this paper, Salam et al. report significant increases in asthma risk associated with exposures experienced early in childhood. Of the several risk factors they studied, the strongest associations they found were with exposures to herbicides and pesticides in infancy, and attending daycare before the age of 4 months old. Children with early persistent asthma were 10 times more likely to have been exposed to herbicides before the end of their first year than controls.
Several features of their results are inconsistent with the "hygiene" hypothesis... that better health care in childhood prevents the immune system from developing normally.
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With this paper, Salam et al. report significant increases in asthma risk associated with exposures experienced early in childhood. Of the several risk factors they studied, the strongest associations they found were with exposures to herbicides and pesticides in infancy, and attending daycare before the age of 4 months old. Children with early persistent asthma were 10 times more likely to have been exposed to herbicides before the end of their first year than controls.
Several features of their results are inconsistent with the "hygiene" hypothesis... that better health care in childhood prevents the immune system from developing normally.
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Infants exposed to herbicides before the age of 1 were 10 times more likely to develop early persistent asthma. [...] Children exposed to herbicides after their first birthday,in contrast, were no more likely to develop asthma than controls.
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Results for pesticide exposure were also significant but not as strong. Children exposed before 1 to pesticides were 3.58 times more likely to develop early persistent asthma than controls. As with herbicides, there was no increased risk of asthma if exposure began after the age of 1.
Exposures to farm animal, farm crop or dust exposure also elevated the risk of early persistent asthma, although the effect was not as pronounced as for pesticides and herbicides.
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They found no association between asthma risk and whether or not the family had pets.
What does it mean? The most striking aspect of their finding is the strong association with herbicides and pesticides before the age of 1. This is the strongest association yet reported in a body of scientific literature in which there are few studies that have attempted to quantify early exposures to pesticides or herbicides and asthma risk in children.
The authors observe:
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Three aspects of their findings are inconsistent with the "hygiene hypothesis,"
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- Children beginning day care before the age of 4 months are more likely to develop asthma. [...]
- Children exposed to farm animals and dust are more likely to develop asthma. The hygiene hypothesis predicts the opposite. [...]
- Children with no siblings were at lower risk to asthma than children with one or two siblings. [...]
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As the authors point out, at the very least the finding that early day care attendance is associated with heightened risk, and that children with no siblings are at lower risk than those with one or two "suggests the need for a more complex "hygiene hypothesis."
[The high prevalence of asthma in inner city poverty centers also undermines this interpretation.]
The chief weaknesses of the study are its dependence upon parent recall and the lack of specificity about the details of exposure. Under most circumstances, these factors would make it false negatives more likely. Hence the strength of the associations discovered should be taken seriously.
While the study falls far short of establishing any causal relationships between exposures and asthma, it adds significantly to the evidence that exposures early in life may increase asthma risk and may thus may be contributing to the burgeoning asthma epidemic. Salam et al.'s work adds more broadly to the weight of evidence that exposures to herbicides and pesticides early in life can have adverse effects and should be avoided in the home and other settings.
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