Summary
Introduction
The association between obesity and asthma control/quality of life commonly relies on body mass index (BMI) as the anthropomorphic measure. Due to limitations of BMI and the existence of alternative measures, such as neck circumference (NC), we examined the association between NC and asthma control/quality of life, with particular attention to male–female differences
Materials and Methods
The AsthMaP-2 Project is an observational study of youth with physician–diagnosed asthma. NC was stratified according to age- and sex-specific cutoffs and associated with asthma control (via Asthma Control Test [ACT]) and quality of life (via Integrated Therapeutics Group [ITG]—Asthma Short Form)
Results
The mean±SD age was 11.9±3.6 years, and 53% were male (N=116). The mean BMI percentile was at the 71±28 percentile. Thirty-one participants (27%) met criteria for high NC. Males with high NC had significantly worse asthma control (P =0.02) and lower quality of life than those with low NC. No similar association was found for females and the proportion of variability in ACTand ITG was best explained by BMI percentile. Conversely, for males, the proportion of variability in these scores explained by NC was larger than BMI percentile alone (Cohen’s f2 =0.04–0.09, a small to medium effect size)
Discussion
Among male youth with asthma, combined use of NC and BMI percentile explained asthma control and quality of life better than BMI alone. Future studies of asthma should include measurement of NC and other anthropogenic measures of regional adiposity to clarify sex differences in asthma.
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