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Andrea Venn Division of Respiratory Medicine, City
Hospital, Nottingham NG5 1PB
Correspondence to: Andrea Venn
mf2av{at}unix.ccl.nottingham.ac.uk
In early childhood wheezing and asthma are more common in
boys than girls.1 This difference has either disappeared
or reversed by early adulthood,2 although the age at which
the change occurs is unclear. We therefore measured the age and sex
specific prevalence of self reported wheeze and diagnosed asthma in
11-16 year old children attending secondary schools in the Nottingham
area.
In 1996 we completed a prevalence survey of all pupils attending
44 secondary schools in a defined postcode area in and around
Nottingham. Questionnaires about lifetime and current wheeze and asthma
diagnosed by a doctor (Appendix ) were distributed to pupils for self
completion during school time. Data were collected on 27 826 pupils
(over 80% of registered pupils) aged 11-16 years, 51% of whom were
boys. Parental responses to the same questions were obtained for a
1 in 4 random subsample of 3894 pupils (59% response).
The self reported lifetime prevalence of wheeze was 30.1%
(8317/27 632), with 19.0% (5253/27 668) of children reporting having
wheezed in the past year. Of the children with current wheeze who also
provided information on asthma 3527/5154 (68%) had had asthma
diagnosed by a doctor at some time. Wheeze and diagnosed asthma were
both significantly more prevalent in girls than boys (relative risk for
wheeze in the past year 1.24 (95% confidence interval 1.18 to 1.30)
(figure); full data are available in a table on our website). However,
this sex difference was dependent on age. At 11 years wheeze was more
common in boys, but thereafter the prevalence of wheeze decreased with
age in boys ( Analysis of parental responses gave lower prevalences of wheeze
(lifetime 25.6% (994/3878), past year 16.4% (636/3880)). Sex reversal
in wheezing (P<0.01 for age-sex interaction term) occurred at age 13, after which prevalence was relatively constant.
The male predominance of wheezing during the first decade of life
is reversed around the time of puberty due to an increase in reported
wheeze in girls and a fall in boys. A tendency for girls to overreport
asthma symptoms and boys to deny them may have overestimated the size
of the sex difference. However, the effect persisted when we used
parental responses and also when we restricted the analysis to current
wheezers with a doctor's diagnosis of asthma, both of which measures
may be less affected by sex. We found no difference in response rates
among boys or girls of different ages except for slightly lower rates
by both sexes in year 11, which would not have affected the overall
trend. Parental response rates did fall with age, but this does not
appear to have biased the estimates since the pattern of parent
reported prevalence is similar to that of self reported prevalence. It
therefore seems unlikely that the sex effect is solely the result of
reporting or selection bias.
Hormonal changes occurring in early puberty could have a role in the
changing prevalences. Troisi et al reported a positive dose-response
relation between oestrogen use and the risk of adult onset asthma in
women.3 Also there is evidence that girls are more likely
than boys to develop asthma in adolescence,4 which could
be hormone related or due to girls experiencing different exposures to
triggers for wheeze at this age, such as smoking. The decrease in
wheezing prevalence in boys may be related to the increase in size of
airways, which are on average smaller than those of girls in
infancy.5 The effects of hormones and other factors
operating during early adolescence on measures of airway inflammation
and other markers of asthma deserve further investigation.
We thank Peter Housden, director of education; Julia Swan,
assistant director; and Tony Dessent, senior assistant director of
Nottinghamshire County Council for their support of the study and all
the teaching and secretarial staff at the participating schools who
made the survey work possible. We also thank Marilyn Antoniak, Andrea
Goldsmith, Chris Smith, and Nicola Williamson for help with data
collection.
Contributors: SL, JH, and JB designed the study. AV, SL, JH,
and MC collected the data. AV analysed the data and wrote the paper.
All authors helped with interpreting the data and preparing the
manuscript. JB is guarantor for the paper.
Funding: National Asthma Campaign and Department of Health.
Conflict of interest: None.
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Appendix
2 test for trend=23.2, P<0.0001) and
increased with age in girls (
2=20.4, P<0.0001), the sex
reversal occurring at age 12. Inclusion of an age-sex interaction term
in the multiple logistic regression model confirmed the significance of
this effect (P<0.0001).

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Self reported prevalence of wheeze in past year by age and
sex
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Appendix
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Acknowledgments
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Appendix: Respiratory questions asked
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Appendix