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African biogeographical ancestry, atopic and non‐atopic asthma and atopy: A study in Latin American children
Author(s) -
da Silva Thiago M.,
Fiaccone Rosemeire L.,
Kehdy Fernanda S. G.,
TarazonaSantos Eduardo,
Rodrigues Laura C.,
Costa Gustavo N. O.,
Figueiredo Camila A.,
dos Santos Darci N.,
Feitosa Caroline A.,
Fattore Gisel L.,
Santos Leticia M.,
AlcantaraNeves Neuza M.,
Cruz Álvaro A.,
Barreto Maurício L.
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
pediatric pulmonology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.866
H-Index - 106
eISSN - 1099-0496
pISSN - 8755-6863
DOI - 10.1002/ppul.24213
Subject(s) - atopy , asthma , genetic genealogy , medicine , allergy , socioeconomic status , atopic dermatitis , immunology , ancestry informative marker , demography , single nucleotide polymorphism , environmental health , population , genotype , genetics , biology , sociology , gene
Background Genetic variants underlying African ancestry have been suggested be implicated in the ethnic‐racial inequalities reported for asthma and allergies. Objectives To investigate the association between individual African ancestry and asthma symptoms, atopic and non‐atopic asthma, and atopy in children. Methods A cross‐sectional study encompassing 1190 individuals was conducted. African biogeographic ancestry was estimated using 370 539 genome‐wide SNPs. Serum levels of specific IgE were measured, and skin prick test (SPT) performed for the most common local aeroallergens. Information on asthma symptoms was obtained by applying the International Study of Allergy and Asthma in Childhood questionnaire. The associations between the proportion of individual African ancestry and the outcomes investigated were analyzed through multivariate models adjusted for socio‐environmental variables, infections markers, and psychosocial factors. Results Each 20% increase in the proportion of African ancestry was negatively associated with SPT reactivity (OR: 0.79, 95%CI: 0.66‐0.96) and positively associated with asthma symptoms in non‐atopic individuals (OR: 1.40, 95%CI: 1.03‐1.89). We estimated that socioeconomic status and number of infections mediated 28.4% of the effect of African ancestry on SPT reactivity, while 20.2% of the effect on non‐atopic asthma was explained by socioeconomic status and behavioral problems in children. Conclusions The negative association observed between African ancestry and atopy is most probably explained by unobserved environmental or social factors that covariate with ancestry. For non‐atopic asthma, in turn, putative genetic variants of risk underlying African ancestry may play some role.

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