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Tackling Childhood Eczema Aggressively Could Help Prevent Asthma

A new Australian study has suggested that more aggressive treatment of childhood eczema may be an important step in preventing asthma.

Aggressive treatment of childhood eczema may be useful in preventing asthma, Australian researchers have revealed.

The study, conducted by researchers at the University of Melbourne, Monash University and Menzies Research Institute in Tasmania, has called for trials of aggressive therapies against childhood eczema in a bid to reduce the incidence of asthma in later life.

Researchers followed more than 8500 people who are part of the Tasmanian Longitudinal Health Study from the ages of seven to 44.

Leader author John Burgess, from the University of Melbourne's Melbourne School of Population Health, said that the study is the first to demonstrate a link between childhood eczema and asthma into middle age.

The study showed that people who had childhood eczema were more likely to develop childhood asthma, new-onset asthma later in life or to have asthma which persisted from childhood into middle age.

Burgess said that childhood eczema increased the risk of someone developing asthma well into adulthood.

"The incidence of asthma in people from the ages of 8 to 44 who had childhood eczema, was nearly double that of people who had never had eczema," Burgess said.

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"The results of our study showed childhood eczema clearly preceded asthma in each later stage of life - later childhood, adolescence, and adulthood.

"This makes a strong argument for trialing aggressive therapies against childhood eczema to help reduce the burden of asthma later in life," he added.

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The study is published online in the Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology.

Source-ANI
RAS/L


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