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LETTER |
The authors are with the Postgraduate Program in Epidemiology, Universidade Federal de Pelotas, Pelotas, Brazil. Fernando C. Barros is also with the Latin-American Center for Perinatology and Human Development, Pan American Health Organization/World Health Organization, Montevideo, Uruguay.
Correspondence: Requests for reprints should be sent to Rosângela da Costa Lima, MD, PhD, CP 464, 96001-970, Pelotas, RS, Brazil (e-mail: roclima{at}terra.com.br).
We would like to thank London and Promislow for their thoughtful review of our article. They raise the possibility that our results might have been affected by confounding, selection bias, and misclassification.
Regarding confounding, we investigated all variables for which we had information in early life and which, according to the literature, might affect either asthma or respiratory illnesses in general. These variables included family income, maternal education, assets index, number of persons sharing a bedroom, number of other children in the home, maternal age, parental smoking, birthweight, gestational age, intrauterine growth retardation, parity, and type of delivery.
London and Promislow rightly point out that the number of persons sharing a bedroom was not included as a possible covariate in the results presented in Table 3
of our article. In this table, we adjusted only for socioeconomic variables; howeveras stated in the text (p1859)after further adjustment for the other potential confounders listed above, including both variables related to crowding (number of persons per bedroom and number of children in the home), there were no further changes in the results (Table 1
). Thus, lack of adjustment for variables related to crowding does not explain our results.
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London and Promislow suggest that some mothers may delay weaning because of early respiratory infection, and they ask that we present information on early wheezing and asthma according to feeding patterns. In fact, our data suggest the opposite. Infants who at 9 months of age received breastfeeding (PR = 0.80; 95% CI = 0.53, 1.23) or mixed feeding (PR = 0.55; 95% CI = 0.35, 0.87) were less likely to have reported asthma or wheezing at the age of 2 years than those who did not receive any breast milk. It should be noted, however, that reported wheezing or asthma at this age is often due to infectious rather than atopic conditions. The literature, as reviewed by Sears,2 shows that breastfeed-ing tends to protect against wheezing conditions in early life, but not later on.
Finally, we share the concern expressed by the writers about the public health message of an article suggesting that breastfeeding may have some detrimental effects, despite the wealth of literature showing its benefits. However, our article was not the first to show such an association. Studies of the 1958 and 1970 United Kingdom birth cohorts3,4 and studies in Arizona,5 Italy,6 and, more recently, New Zealand2 all show increased risk of atopy, asthma, or both among breastfed children.
References
1. Victora CG, Barros FC, Lima RC, et al. The Pelotas birth cohort study, Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil, 19822001. Cad Saude Publica. 2003;19:12411256.[Medline]
2. Sears MR, Taylor DR, Poulton R. Breastfeeding and asthma: appraising the controversya rebuttal. Pediatr Pulmonol. 2003;36:366368.[ISI][Medline]
3. Kaplan BA, Mascie-Taylor CG. Biosocial factors in the epidemiology of childhood asthma in a British national sample. J Epidemiol Community Health. 1985;39: 152156.[Abstract]
4. Taylor B, Wadsworth J, Golding J, Butler N. Breast feeding, eczema, asthma, and hayfever. J Epidemiol Community Health. 1983;37:9599.[Abstract]
5. Wright AL, Holberg CJ, Taussig LM, Martinez FD. Factors influencing the relation of infant feeding to asthma and recurrent wheeze in childhood. Thorax. 2001;56:192197.
6. Rusconi F, Galassi C, Corbo GM, et al. Risk factors for early, persistent, and late-onset wheezing in young children. SIDRIA Collaborative Group. Am J Respir Crit Care Med. 1999;160:16171622.
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