Recent Insights into the Environmental Determinants of Childhood Asthma

Curr Allergy Asthma Rep. 2024 May;24(5):253-260. doi: 10.1007/s11882-024-01140-2. Epub 2024 Mar 18.

Abstract

Purpose of review: Ubiquitous environmental exposures, including ambient air pollutants, are linked to the development and severity of childhood asthma. Advances in our understanding of these links have increasingly led to clinical interventions to reduce asthma morbidity.

Recent findings: We review recent work untangling the complex relationship between air pollutants, including particulate matter, nitrogen dioxide, and ozone and asthma, such as vulnerable windows of pediatric exposure and their interaction with other factors influencing asthma development and severity. These have led to interventions to reduce air pollutant levels in children's homes and schools. We also highlight emerging environmental exposures increasingly associated with childhood asthma. Growing evidence supports the present threat of climate change to children with asthma. Environmental factors play a large role in the pathogenesis and persistence of pediatric asthma; in turn, this poses an opportunity to intervene to change the course of disease early in life.

Keywords: Air pollution; Childhood asthma; Environmental exposures; Epidemiology; Indoor air; Pediatrics.

Publication types

  • Review
  • Research Support, N.I.H., Extramural

MeSH terms

  • Air Pollutants* / adverse effects
  • Air Pollution / adverse effects
  • Asthma* / etiology
  • Child
  • Climate Change
  • Environmental Exposure* / adverse effects
  • Humans
  • Nitrogen Dioxide / adverse effects
  • Ozone / adverse effects
  • Particulate Matter* / adverse effects

Substances

  • Air Pollutants
  • Particulate Matter
  • Ozone
  • Nitrogen Dioxide