Explaining ethnic disparities in lung function among young adults: A pilot investigation.

Ethnic disparities in lung function have been linked mainly to anthropometric factors but have not been fully explained. We conducted a cross-sectional pilot study to investigate how best to study ethnic differences in lung function in young adults and evaluate whether these could be explained by bi...

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Main Authors: Neil J Saad, Jaymini Patel, Cosetta Minelli, Peter G J Burney
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2017-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5456386?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-b3247f9edadb43e5907eff8319808a502020-11-24T21:48:05ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032017-01-01126e017896210.1371/journal.pone.0178962Explaining ethnic disparities in lung function among young adults: A pilot investigation.Neil J SaadJaymini PatelCosetta MinelliPeter G J BurneyEthnic disparities in lung function have been linked mainly to anthropometric factors but have not been fully explained. We conducted a cross-sectional pilot study to investigate how best to study ethnic differences in lung function in young adults and evaluate whether these could be explained by birth weight and socio-economic factors.We recruited 112 university students of White and South Asian British ethnicity, measured post-bronchodilator lung function, obtained information on respiratory symptoms and socio-economic factors through questionnaires, and acquired birth weight through data linkage. We regressed lung function against ethnicity and candidate predictors defined a priori using linear regression, and used penalised regression to examine a wider range of factors. We reviewed the implications of our findings for the feasibility of a larger study.There was a similar parental socio-economic environment and no difference in birth weight between the two ethnic groups, but the ethnic difference in FVC adjusted for sex, age, height, demi-span, father's occupation, birth weight, maternal educational attainment and maternal upbringing was 0.81L (95%CI: -1.01 to -0.54L). Difference in body proportions did not explain the ethnic differences although parental immigration was an important predictor of FVC independent of ethnic group. Participants were comfortable with study procedures and we were able to link birth weight data to clinical measurements.Studies of ethnic disparities in lung function among young adults are feasible. Future studies should recruit a socially more diverse sample and investigate the role of markers of acculturation in explaining such differences.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5456386?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Neil J Saad
Jaymini Patel
Cosetta Minelli
Peter G J Burney
spellingShingle Neil J Saad
Jaymini Patel
Cosetta Minelli
Peter G J Burney
Explaining ethnic disparities in lung function among young adults: A pilot investigation.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Neil J Saad
Jaymini Patel
Cosetta Minelli
Peter G J Burney
author_sort Neil J Saad
title Explaining ethnic disparities in lung function among young adults: A pilot investigation.
title_short Explaining ethnic disparities in lung function among young adults: A pilot investigation.
title_full Explaining ethnic disparities in lung function among young adults: A pilot investigation.
title_fullStr Explaining ethnic disparities in lung function among young adults: A pilot investigation.
title_full_unstemmed Explaining ethnic disparities in lung function among young adults: A pilot investigation.
title_sort explaining ethnic disparities in lung function among young adults: a pilot investigation.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2017-01-01
description Ethnic disparities in lung function have been linked mainly to anthropometric factors but have not been fully explained. We conducted a cross-sectional pilot study to investigate how best to study ethnic differences in lung function in young adults and evaluate whether these could be explained by birth weight and socio-economic factors.We recruited 112 university students of White and South Asian British ethnicity, measured post-bronchodilator lung function, obtained information on respiratory symptoms and socio-economic factors through questionnaires, and acquired birth weight through data linkage. We regressed lung function against ethnicity and candidate predictors defined a priori using linear regression, and used penalised regression to examine a wider range of factors. We reviewed the implications of our findings for the feasibility of a larger study.There was a similar parental socio-economic environment and no difference in birth weight between the two ethnic groups, but the ethnic difference in FVC adjusted for sex, age, height, demi-span, father's occupation, birth weight, maternal educational attainment and maternal upbringing was 0.81L (95%CI: -1.01 to -0.54L). Difference in body proportions did not explain the ethnic differences although parental immigration was an important predictor of FVC independent of ethnic group. Participants were comfortable with study procedures and we were able to link birth weight data to clinical measurements.Studies of ethnic disparities in lung function among young adults are feasible. Future studies should recruit a socially more diverse sample and investigate the role of markers of acculturation in explaining such differences.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5456386?pdf=render
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