Season of birth and childhood food allergy in Australia
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Authors
Mullins, Raymond
Clark, Sunday
Katelaris, Constance
Smith, Victoria
Solley, Graham
Camargo, Carlos A
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Volume Title
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Blackwell Publishing Ltd
Abstract
Background: Recent studies suggest a possible role for low ultraviolet radiation exposure and low vitamin D status as a risk factor for food allergy. We hypothesized that children born in autumn/winter months (less sun exposure) might have higher food allergy rates than those born in spring/summer. Methods: We compared IgE-mediated food allergy rates by season of birth in 835 children aged 0-4yr assessed 1995-2009 in a specialist referral clinic, using population births as controls. To address potential concerns about generalizability, we also examined national prescriptions for adrenaline autoinjectors (2007) and infant hypoallergenic formula (2006-2007). Results: Although live births in the general ACT population showed no seasonal pattern (50% autumn/winter vs. 50% spring/summer), autumn/winter births were more common than spring/summer births among food allergy patients (57% vs. 43%; p<0.001). The same seasonal pattern was observed with peanut (60% vs. 40%; p<0.001) and egg (58% vs. 42%; p=0.003). Regional UVR intensity was correlated with relative rate of overall food allergy (β, -1.83; p=0.05) and peanut allergy (β, -3.27; p=0.01). National data showed that autumn/winter births also were more common among children prescribed EpiPens (54% vs. 46%; p<0.001) and infant hypoallergenic formula (54% vs. 46%; p<0.001). Conclusions: The significantly higher rates of food allergy in children born autumn/winter (compared to spring/summer), the relationship between relative food allergy rates and monthly UVR, combined with national adrenaline autoinjector and infant hypoallergenic formula prescription data, suggest that ultraviolet light exposure/vitamin D status may be one of many potential factors contributing to childhood food allergy pathogenesis.
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Source
Pediatric Allergy and Immunology
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2037-12-31