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Prevalence of cough throughout childhood: A cohort study

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posted on 2017-11-01, 10:06 authored by Maja Jurca, Alban Ramette, Cristian M. Dogaru, Myrofora Goutaki, Ben D. Spycher, Philipp Latzin, Erol A. Gaillard, Claudia E. Kuehni
Background Cough in children is a common reason for medical consultations and affects quality of life. There are little population-based data on the epidemiology of recurrent cough in children and how this varies by age and sex, or between children with and without wheeze. We determined the prevalence of cough throughout childhood, comparing several standardised cough questions. We did this for the entire population and separately for girls and boys, and for children with and without wheeze. Methods In a population-based prospective cohort from Leicestershire, UK, we assessed prevalence of cough with repeated questionnaires from early childhood to adolescence. We asked whether the child usually coughed more than other children, with or without colds, had night-time cough or cough triggered by various factors (triggers, related to increased breathing effort, allergic or food triggers). We calculated prevalence from age 1 to 18 years using generalised estimating equations for all children, and for children with and without wheeze. Results Of 7670 children, 10% (95% CI 10–11%) coughed more than other children, 69% (69–70%) coughed usually with a cold, 34% to 55% age-dependently coughed without colds, and 25% (25–26%) had night-time cough. Prevalence of coughing more than peers, with colds, at night, and triggered by laughter varied little throughout childhood, while cough without colds and cough triggered by exercise, house dust or pollen became more frequent with age. Cough was more common in boys than in girls in the first decade of life, differences got smaller in early teens and reversed after the age of 14 years. All symptoms were more frequent in children with wheeze. Conclusions Prevalence of cough in children varies with age, sex and with the questions used to assess it, suggesting that comparisons between studies are only valid for similar questions and age groups.

Funding

All phases of this study were supported by the Swiss National Science Foundation (grants: SNF PDFMP3-137033, 32003B-162820, 32003B-144068, 32003B-122341, PDFMP3-123162), Bestcilia EU and Asthma UK 07/048. URL: http://www.snf.ch, http://www.asthma.org.uk.

History

Citation

PLoS ONE, 2017, 12(5): e0177485

Author affiliation

/Organisation/COLLEGE OF MEDICINE, BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES AND PSYCHOLOGY/School of Medicine/Department of Infection, Immunity and Inflammation

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  • VoR (Version of Record)

Published in

PLoS ONE

Publisher

Public Library of Science (PLoS)

issn

1932-6203

Acceptance date

2017-04-27

Copyright date

2017

Available date

2017-11-01

Publisher version

http://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0177485

Language

en

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