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Trajectories of childhood immune development and respiratory health relevant to asthma and allergy
journal contribution
posted on 2018-10-01, 00:00 authored by H H F Tang, S M Teo, D C M Belgrave, M D Evans, D J Jackson, M Brozynska, M M H Kusel, S L Johnston, J E Gern, R F Lemanske, A Simpson, A Custovic, Peter SlyPeter Sly, P G Holt, K E Holt, M InouyeEvents in early life contribute to subsequent risk of asthma; however, the causes and trajectories of childhood wheeze are heterogeneous and do not always result in asthma. Similarly, not all atopic individuals develop wheeze, and vice versa. The reasons for these differences are unclear. Using unsupervised model-based cluster analysis, we identified latent clusters within a prospective birth cohort with deep immunological and respiratory phenotyping. We characterised each cluster in terms of immunological profile and disease risk, and replicated our results in external cohorts from the UK and USA. We discovered three distinct trajectories, one of which is a high-risk ‘atopic’ cluster with increased propensity for allergic diseases throughout childhood. Atopy contributes varyingly to later wheeze depending on cluster membership. Our findings demonstrate the utility of unsupervised analysis in elucidating heterogeneity in asthma pathogenesis and provide a foundation for improving management and prevention of childhood asthma.
History
Journal
eLifeVolume
7Article number
e35856Publisher
eLife Sciences PublicationsLocation
Cambridge, Eng.Publisher DOI
Link to full text
ISSN
2050-084XeISSN
2050-084XLanguage
engPublication classification
C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journalUsage metrics
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No categories selectedKeywords
ATOPY PHENOTYPESBiologyLife Sciences & BiomedicinePATTERNSPEANUT ALLERGYPREDICTIONRISKScience & TechnologyLife Sciences & Biomedicine - Other Topics1ST 6 YEARSVIRAL-INFECTIONSYOUNG-CHILDRENFOLLOW-UPSENSITIZATIONallergybioinformaticscomputational biologyhumanimmune developmentrespiratory diseasesystems biology