Global change, climate change, and asthma in children: Direct and indirect effects - A WAO Pediatric Asthma Committee Report

IF 3.9 2区 医学 Q2 ALLERGY World Allergy Organization Journal Pub Date : 2024-11-01 DOI:10.1016/j.waojou.2024.100988
Peter N. Le Souëf MD , Yuichi Adachi MD, PhD , Eleni Anastasiou MD , Ignacio J. Ansotegui MD, PhD , Héctor A. Badellino MD, PhD , Tina Banzon MD , Cesar Pozo Beltrán MD , Gennaro D'Amato MD , Zeinab A. El-Sayed MD, PhD , Rene Maximiliano Gómez PhD , Elham Hossny MD, PhD , Ömer Kalayci MD , Mário Morais-Almeida MD, PhD , Antonio Nieto-Garcia MD, PhD , David B. Peden MD, MS , Wanda Phipatanakul MD , Jiu-Yao Wang MD, DPhil , I-Jen Wan MD, PhD , Gary Wong MD , Paraskevi Xepapadaki MD , Nikolaos G. Papadopoulos MD, PhD
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Abstract

The twenty-first century has seen a fundamental shift in disease epidemiology with anthropogenic environmental change emerging as the likely dominant factor affecting the distribution and severity of current and future human disease. This is especially true of allergic diseases and asthma with their intimate relationship with the natural environment. Climate change-related variables including increased ambient temperature, heat waves, extreme weather events, air pollution, and rainfall distribution, all can directly affect asthma in children, but each of these variables also indirectly affects asthma via alterations in pollen production and release, outdoor allergen exposure or the microbiome. Air pollution, with its many and varied respiratory consequences, is likely to have the greatest effect, as it has increased globally due to rapid increases in fossil fuel combustion, global population, crowding, and megacities, as well as forest burning and trees succumbing to an increasingly hostile environment. Human activities have also caused substantial deterioration of the global microbiome with reductions in biodiversity for molds, bacteria, and viruses. Reduced microbiome diversity has, in turn, been associated with increases in Th2 allergic responses and allergic disease. The collective effect of these changes has already shifted allergy and asthma disease patterns. Given that changes in climate have been relatively small to date, the unavoidable, much greater shifts in climate in the future are concerning. Determining the relative scale of the direct versus indirect effects of climate change variables is needed if effective avoidance and adaptive measures are to be implemented. This would also require much more basic, epidemiological, and clinical research to understand the causal mechanisms, the most relevant climate factors involved, the regions most affected and, most importantly, effective and actionable adaptation measures. We suggest that allergy and respiratory health workers should follow current guidance to reduce present risks related to climate change and watch for new recommendations to reduce future risks. Since the respiratory system is the one most affected by climate change, they also need to call for more research in this area and show strong leadership in advocating for urgent action to protect children by reducing or reversing factors that have led to our deteriorating climate.
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全球变化、气候变化与儿童哮喘:直接和间接影响 - 世界哮喘组织儿科哮喘委员会报告
二十一世纪,疾病流行病学发生了根本性转变,人为环境变化可能成为影响当前和未来人类疾病分布和严重程度的主要因素。与自然环境密切相关的过敏性疾病和哮喘更是如此。与气候变化相关的变量包括环境温度升高、热浪、极端天气事件、空气污染和降雨分布,这些都会直接影响儿童哮喘,但这些变量也会通过改变花粉的产生和释放、户外过敏原接触或微生物组间接影响哮喘。空气污染对呼吸系统的影响多种多样,其中影响最大的可能是空气污染,因为化石燃料燃烧、全球人口、拥挤和特大城市的迅速增加,以及森林燃烧和树木屈服于日益恶劣的环境,导致全球空气污染加剧。人类活动还导致全球微生物群严重恶化,霉菌、细菌和病毒的生物多样性减少。微生物群多样性的减少反过来又与 Th2 过敏反应和过敏性疾病的增加有关。这些变化的集体效应已经改变了过敏和哮喘疾病的模式。鉴于迄今为止气候变化相对较小,未来不可避免的更大气候变化令人担忧。如果要实施有效的避免和适应措施,就必须确定气候变化变量的直接和间接影响的相对规模。这也需要进行更多的基础、流行病学和临床研究,以了解成因机制、最相关的气候因素、受影响最严重的地区,以及最重要的是,有效和可行的适应措施。我们建议,过敏和呼吸系统医务工作者应遵循当前的指导原则,降低与气候变化相关的当前风险,并关注降低未来风险的新建议。由于呼吸系统是受气候变化影响最大的系统,他们还需要呼吁在这一领域开展更多研究,并显示出强大的领导力,倡导采取紧急行动,通过减少或扭转导致气候恶化的因素来保护儿童。
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来源期刊
World Allergy Organization Journal
World Allergy Organization Journal Immunology and Microbiology-Immunology
CiteScore
9.10
自引率
5.90%
发文量
91
审稿时长
9 weeks
期刊介绍: The official pubication of the World Allergy Organization, the World Allergy Organization Journal (WAOjournal) publishes original mechanistic, translational, and clinical research on the topics of allergy, asthma, anaphylaxis, and clincial immunology, as well as reviews, guidelines, and position papers that contribute to the improvement of patient care. WAOjournal publishes research on the growth of allergy prevalence within the scope of single countries, country comparisons, and practical global issues and regulations, or threats to the allergy specialty. The Journal invites the submissions of all authors interested in publishing on current global problems in allergy, asthma, anaphylaxis, and immunology. Of particular interest are the immunological consequences of climate change and the subsequent systematic transformations in food habits and their consequences for the allergy/immunology discipline.
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