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The observed association between maternal anxiety and adolescent asthma: children of twin design suggest familial effects.

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posted on 2024-10-25, 14:12 authored by Ida Havland, Cecilia LundholmCecilia Lundholm, Paul LichtensteinPaul Lichtenstein, Jenae M Neiderhiser, Jody M Ganiban, Erica L Spotts, Hasse Walum, David Reiss, Catarina Almqvist MalmrosCatarina Almqvist Malmros
BACKGROUND: Previous studies indicate that maternal anxiety is associated with asthma in the adolescent child, but mechanisms are unclear. OBJECTIVE: To investigate the association between maternal anxiety and maternal, self- and register-based report of asthma in the adolescent child, and whether the association remains after control of familial confounding (shared environmental and genetic factors). METHOD: From the Twin and Offspring Study of Sweden, 1691 mothers (1058 twins) and their adolescent child were included. The association between maternal self-reported anxiety (Beck Anxiety Inventory (BAI) and Karolinska Scales of Personality (KSP) somatic or psychic anxiety) and asthma based on subjective (maternal or child report) or objective (register-based diagnosis and medication) measures were analysed using logistic regression. The children-of-twins design was used to explore whether genes or environment contribute to the association. RESULTS: Maternal BAI anxiety (OR 2.02, CI 1.15-3.55) was significantly associated with adolescent asthma reported by the mother. Maternal KSP somatic anxiety (OR 1.74, CI 1.04-2.91) and psychic anxiety (OR 1.74, CI 1.05-2.86) was significantly associated with breathlessness reported by the adolescent child. In contrast, maternal anxiety was not associated with increased risk for the register-based outcomes of asthma diagnosis or medication. The results remained also after adjusting for covariates and the children-of-twins analyses which indicate that the association was due to familial confounding. CONCLUSIONS: We found some associations between maternal anxiety and subjectively reported offspring asthma or breathlessness which may be due to familial effects. A likely candidate for explaining this familial confounding is heritable personality traits associated with both anxiety and subjective measures of asthma.

Funding

Fetal growth impairment and catch-up growth - from genes to teens in kin and twin : Swedish Research Council | 2011-03060_VR

History

File version

  • Published

Publication status

Published online

Sub type

Article

Journal

PLoS One

ISSN

1932-6203

eISSN

1932-6203

Volume

8

Issue

6

Article number

e66040

Language

  • eng

Original self archiving date

2017-01-02

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