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Effects of treating helminths during pregnancy and early childhood on risk of allergy‐related outcomes: Follow‐up of a randomized controlled trial
Authors:Benigna Namara  Stephen Nash  Swaib A. Lule  Hellen Akurut  Harriet Mpairwe  Florence Akello  Josephine Tumusiime  Moses Kizza  Joyce Kabagenyi  Gyaviira Nkurunungi  Lawrence Muhangi  Emily L. Webb  Moses Muwanga  Alison M. Elliott
Affiliation:1. MRC/UVRI Uganda Research Unit, Entebbe, Uganda;2. London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, London, UK;3. Entebbe Hospital, Entebbe, Uganda
Abstract:

Background

Helminth infections, common in low‐income countries, may protect against allergy‐related disease. Early exposure may be a key. In the Entebbe Mother and Baby Study, treating helminths during pregnancy resulted in increased eczema rates in early childhood. We followed the cohort to determine whether this translated to increased asthma rates at school age.

Methods

This randomized, double‐blind, placebo‐controlled trial, conducted in Entebbe, Uganda, had three interventions. During pregnancy, women were randomized, simultaneously, to albendazole vs placebo and to praziquantel vs placebo. Their children were independently randomized to quarterly albendazole vs placebo from age 15 months to 5 years. We here report follow‐up to age 9 years. Primary outcomes at 9 years were recent reported wheeze, skin prick test positivity (SPT) to common allergens and allergen‐specific IgE positivity to dust mite or cockroach. Secondary outcomes were doctor‐diagnosed asthma and eczema rates between 5 and 9 years, recent eczema, rhinitis and urticaria at 9 years, and SPT and IgE responses to individual allergens.

Results

2507 pregnant women were enrolled; 1215 children were seen at age nine, of whom 1188 are included in this analysis. Reported wheeze was rare at 9 years (3.7%) while SPT positivity (25.0%) and IgE positivity (44.1%) were common. There was no evidence of a treatment effect for any of the three interventions on any of the primary outcomes.

Conclusions

Prenatal and early‐life treatment of helminths, in the absence of change in other exposures, is unlikely to increase the risk of atopic diseases later in childhood in this tropical, low‐income setting.
Keywords:albendazole  asthma  atopy  eczema  helminth  IgE  praziquantel  prenatal  school age  wheeze
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