Paediatrics (RCH) - Theses

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    The epidemiology and risk factors of anaphylaxis and food-induced anaphylaxis worldwide
    Wang, Yichao ( 2019)
    Anaphylaxis is a severe allergic reaction that is rapid in onset and may cause death. There are increasing reports from individual countries and regions on anaphylaxis prevalence or incidence; however, there has been no systematic summary of the worldwide evidence among the paediatric population. An increasing rate of hospital admissions for food-induced anaphylaxis was observed in Australia from 1993 to 2012, especially among young children. Although rising rates of anaphylaxis have also been reported in other western countries, little is known about the time trends in Asian regions. Time trends of adrenaline auto-injectors (AAI) prescription is a good supplement surrogate for the time trends of anaphylaxis risk in the community. Some studies reported time trends of AAI prescription internationally, such as USA, UK and Canada; however, there is little information on the time trends of AAI prescription or dispensing in Australia in recent years. Previous international studies have reported that ethnicity is associated with the risk of anaphylaxis. Food allergy was found to be more common in children born in Australia with Asian parents than children born in Australia with Caucasian parents. However, it is not known whether ethnicity is also a risk factor for the development of anaphylaxis and food-induced anaphylaxis in Australia. Food allergy is an important cause of anaphylaxis. People with food allergy have a high risk of anaphylaxis, but not all of them will have an anaphylactic reaction. It is hence crucial to know the risk factors of having anaphylactic reactions in the food allergic population. Few studies have examined risk factors for food-induced anaphylaxis in food-allergic children. The characteristics of children with food allergy who are more likely to experience anaphylaxis are unknown. Therefore, this thesis aims to describe the worldwide incidence and prevalence of anaphylaxis and identify risk factors for anaphylaxis and food-induced anaphylaxis in both the general population and the food-allergic population. Firstly, I conducted a systematic review to describe the incidence and prevalence of anaphylaxis in children worldwide. I found a high heterogeneity between studies which limited the interpretation of an overall combined incidence and prevalence. I found increasing time trends of all-cause anaphylaxis and food-induced anaphylaxis in children from included studies and studies in developing areas were underrepresented. By using hospital admission data for anaphylaxis from the Hospital Authority of Hong Kong, I reported increasing time trends of both all-cause anaphylaxis and food-induced anaphylaxis in the paediatric population in Hong Kong between 2001 and 2015. By analysing AAI dispensing data from the Australian Pharmaceutical Benefits Scheme (PBS) database, I found an increasing incidence rate of patients with AAI in Australia from 2005 to 2014. Different trends were reported by sex, age and state. I found a shift towards more AAI prescriptions being provided by general practitioners (GPs) rather than specialists in most regions in Australia. By using the data from the School Entrant Health Questionnaire in Victoria, Australia, I investigated the risk factors of anaphylaxis in the general population. I found an association between Asian ethnicity and anaphylaxis risk in children living in Australia and identified the high-risk group (Australian-born children with Asian-born mothers) for anaphylaxis. Lastly, I used data from the HealthNuts study to explore the frequency and risk factors of anaphylaxis in food allergic children from a community setting. I found a high frequency of experiencing anaphylactic reactions (11.5%) in the preceding 12 months in children with food allergy. In summary, the results presented in this thesis have provided further knowledge on the epidemiology of anaphylaxis and food-induced anaphylaxis in the general population and identified important predictors of anaphylaxis in the general population and the food allergic population. The identification of these essential predictors has important implications for the management of anaphylaxis and will improve our understanding of the development of anaphylaxis.
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    Environmental and genetic risk factors for food allergy in children with Asian ancestry
    Suaini, Noor Hidayatul Aini Bte ( 2019)
    Epidemiological and genetic studies on food allergy to date have focused primarily on the Caucasian population. This is despite emerging evidence that food allergy appears to be rising in Asian countries, alongside the increasing Westernisation and urbanisation in these countries. Even less is known about Asian migrants living in Western countries. A population-based study on food allergy found the risk of food allergy to be three times higher in infants of East Asian ancestry than infants of Caucasian ancestry. It is thought that infants growing up in Australia are exposed to environmental agents that have a differential effect on the immune system depending on their genetic background. However, the influence of specific genetic and environmental risk factors is currently unknown. It is also unclear if the increased risk of food allergy translates to higher risk of other allergic diseases later in childhood. The main objective of this thesis is to identify specific environmental and genetic factors on the risk of food allergy in the Asian population living in Australia. This thesis aims to quantify the prevalence of, and identify risk factors for food allergy and allergic comorbidities in the Asian population. An additional aim is to identify genetic variants that increase the risk of food allergy in the East Asian population and compare this to the Caucasian population living in Australia. This thesis primarily used data and samples from the longitudinal HealthNuts study where 5,276 1-year-old infants attending council run vaccination sessions across Melbourne were recruited. Skin prick tests to a range of food were carried out on infants and those with a wheal size less than 1 mm underwent an oral food challenge. The 1-year-old infants were followed up again at age 6 years and data collected at this follow-up visit were also used for analyses in this thesis. Additionally, data collected from a Growing Up in Singapore Towards Healthy Outcomes (GUSTO) birth cohort was also used to compare the risk factors and prevalence of allergic diseases between East Asians living in Melbourne and East Asians living in Singapore. This thesis reports that Australian-born children with East Asian parents have a higher burden of allergic rhinitis, eczema and aeroallergen sensitisation but not asthma, in the first six years of life compared to children of Caucasian ancestry. Moreover, children with IgE-mediated food allergy and eczema in infancy were 3 times more likely to have asthma and 2 times more likely to have allergic rhinitis at age 6 years, irrespective of ancestry. Additionally, East Asian children living in Melbourne have a higher risk of food allergy compared to East Asian children living in Singapore. Despite delayed introduction of allergens into the diet compared to the Asian population in Melbourne, Asian children in Singapore had less food allergy. While eczema rates were lower in Singapore than in Melbourne, early onset eczema was associated with an increased risk of food allergy in both Singapore and Melbourne. In terms of genetic risk factors, a systematic review conducted as part of this thesis identified several genes of interest known to be involved in immune regulation, cell function and epidermal barrier function. However, studies were of varied quality and the reproducibility of findings for the same SNPs were minimal. Some of the highly re-producible genes identified from the literature include HLA, FLG and IL13. Additionally, there was also a paucity of studies carried out in the Asian population that were able to elucidate underlying mechanisms for the differential food allergy risks observed in the population. This highlighted the need for genetic studies focused in this population. This thesis found that HLA rs7192 minor allele was associated with increased risk of peanut allergy in the Caucasian population but not East Asian population. Among sensitised children with two East Asian born parents, those with the minor allele for rs231735, rs231804 or rs11571291 (all CTLA4) have a reduced risk of egg allergy. The findings of this thesis identify Asian children living in Australia as a high risk allergic group not just in infancy but throughout early childhood. As a multifactorial disease, both environmental and genetic factors are known to contribute to the pathogenesis of food allergy. Therefore, it may be that the increased risk of food allergy observed in genetically predisposed East Asian children living in Melbourne unmasked upon exposure to environmental risk factors.
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    Prevalence, risk factors and outcomes of hearing loss in Australian children and adults: growing up in Australia’s child health CheckPoint study
    Wang, Jing ( 2019)
    Background Hearing loss of ageing is being reframed as a lifecourse problem with childhood origins. Supporting this theory, recent studies suggest a possible role of obesity, inflammation and telomere shortening in the pathogenesis of hearing loss in older adults. However, whether and when these associations emerge in populations is not known. Unlike clinical hearing loss requiring hearing aids and cochlear implantation, less is known about the outcomes of milder losses, which is a requisite for evidence-based hearing policy. Aims In 1485 child-parent dyads at child age 11-12 years, this thesis aimed to: 1) describe the current prevalence of hearing loss in Australian children and mid-life adults; 2) examine associations of obesity, inflammation and telomere length with hearing acuity in children and mid-life adults; 3) investigate child outcomes of slight-mild hearing loss. Methods Design & Participants: Children and parents in the national population-based cross-sectional Child Health CheckPoint sub-study nested within the Longitudinal Study of Australian Children (LSAC). LSAC recruited 5107 infants aged 3 to 19 months in 2004, following them across 8 biennial waves. Measures (all CheckPoint unless specified): Pure-tone audiometry; anthropometry (body mass index (BMI, kg/m2), fat/fat-free mass indices, waist-to-height ratio; LSAC waves 2-6 - BMI); plasma Glycoprotein A (GlycA, a biomarker of chronic inflammation); relative telomere length (T/S ratio); and child outcomes (health-related quality of life; academic and behavioural outcomes from LSAC wave 6). Analysis: We calculated prevalence of hearing loss with 95% Confidence Intervals (CIs). Linear/logistic regression quantified associations of body composition/trajectories (derived from latent class analysis), GlycA and telomere length with hearing threshold/loss. Linear regression quantified associations of hearing threshold/loss with outcomes. Results Aim 1: In children (n=1485, mean age 11.4 (standard deviation (SD) 0.5) years) and adults (n=1485, mean age 42.9 (SD 5.1) years), the prevalence of bilateral hearing loss >15 dB HL (slight or worse) was 9.3% and 27.3% respectively within speech frequencies. Prevalence in children rose substantively since 1990. Aim 2: Concurrent obesity, decade-long BMI trajectories and GlycA (but not telomere length) showed small associations with poorer hearing, particularly in lower frequencies. Associations evident by age 11-12 years were generally stronger in mid-life. Compared with those of normal weight, women with persistent severe obesity showed three times the odds of hearing loss. For every SD rise in GlycA, the odds of hearing loss rose by around 10% for children and 20% for adults. Aim 3: Scores of children with slight-mild bilateral hearing loss were 0.2-0.3 SD lower for sentence repetition, teacher-reported learning and physical PedsQL, but not other outcomes (e.g. receptive vocabulary, mathematical thinking, behaviour, psychosocial PedsQL). Conclusion Slight or worse hearing loss in childhood is prevalent and may be increasing. This may presage the profound later burden of age-related hearing loss. Like other age-related diseases, hearing loss may have adipose and inflammatory antecedents. Replication and mechanistic studies could inform causal inference and early prevention efforts. Slight-mild hearing loss showed small associations with some child outcomes; future research should investigate longitudinal and indirect effects, and the cost-benefit of identification and management strategies by age.
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    Intragenic DNA methylation and neurodevelopmental outcomes in children with fragile X-related disorders
    Arpone, Marta ( 2019)
    The type and severity of clinical involvement in children with fragile X syndrome (FXS) and disorders related to premutations (PM) of the fragile X mental retardation 1 gene (FMR1), herein collectively denoted as fragile X-related disorders (FXDs), is highly variable. Multiple molecular factors contribute to the heterogeneity of neurodevelopmental outcomes. Increased intragenic DNA methylation (DNAm) in blood of the fragile X-related epigenetic element 2 (FREE2) region, located at the FMR1 exon 1/intron 1 boundary, was associated with lower intellectual functioning in a cohort of female children and adults with FXS and with neuro-cognitive and psychiatric phenotypes in women with PM. Nevertheless, FREE2 DNAm has not yet been investigated in exclusively paediatric male and female FXDs cohorts. The overarching aim of this thesis was to explore FREE2 DNAm and neurodevelopmental outcomes of Australian male and female children with FXDs. Matrix assisted laser desorption/ionization time-of-flight mass spectrometry and methylation specific-quantitative melt analysis were used to analyse FREE2 DNAm in venous blood, buccal epithelial cells (BEC) and retrieved newborn blood spots (NBS). In addition, FMR1 mRNA levels in blood were assessed using real-time polymerase chain reaction (PCR) relative standard curve method. The evaluation of the neurodevelopmental outcomes concentrated on direct clinical assessment of intellectual functioning and autism spectrum disorder (ASD) symptom severity. Intelligence Quotient (IQ) scores were corrected for floor effect using the Whitaker and Gordon (WG) extrapolation method. The findings highlighted the variability of the clinical presentation of children with PM. Results also showed that compared to sex-matched paediatric controls, children with FXS had significantly higher levels of FREE2 DNAm levels in blood and BEC and, within the FXS group, higher FREE2 DNAm levels in blood correlated with lower FMR1 mRNA levels. In children with FXS, the application of the WG method effectively addressed the floor effect inherent in standardised intelligence scales, unmasked inter-individual variability in IQ scores and uncovered significant associations between intragenic DNAm and neurodevelopmental outcomes. Strength and statistical significance of these epigenotype-phenotype relationships varied based on sex, position of the differentially methylated sites, tissue analysed, assay used and neurodevelopmental domain investigated. The most significant finding was in males with FXS, for whom higher levels of BEC FREE2 DNAm were associated with lower WG-corrected Full Scale IQ (cFSIQ) and Performance IQ (cPIQ) scores. Finally, findings showed that the best-performing FREE2 biomarker had sensitivity, specificity, negative and positive predictive values of 100% for detection of full mutation alleles in NBS of males and females with FXS. Additionally, this study revealed that for males with FXS, FREE2 DNAm in NBS was significantly associated with lower cFSIQ and cPIQ scores obtained in childhood and adolescence. This is the first study in any monogenic neurodevelopmental disorder associated with intellectual disability, showing that a perinatal epigenetic biomarker is significantly associated with paediatric neuropsychological outcomes. In conclusion, the results of this thesis contribute to the characterisation of the neurodevelopmental outcomes in children with FXDs, provide evidence that FREE2 DNAm is a sensitive epigenetic biomarker significantly associated with the variability of intellectual functioning in male children with FXS, and may have implications for the development of new methylation specific tests for earlier diagnosis with potential prognostic applications.