Rationale: There is increasing interest in the potential influence of fetal and early life conditions on childhood wheezing. Objectives: To investigate the associations between maternal complications and procedures in pregnancy and at birth and the risk of various wheezing phenotypes in young children. Methods: We studied 15,609 children, aged 6-7 yr, enrolled in a population-based study. Standardized questionnaires were completed by the children's mothers.
AT A GLANCE COMMENTARY Scientific Knowledge on the SubjectMaternal smoking in pregnancy influences lung development and is associated with wheezing in childhood; other prenatal and perinatal factors (maternal infections, obstetric conditions) have been inconclusively associated with wheezing among offspring.
What This Study Adds to the FieldAn association was found between maternal hypertension, diabetes, and urinary tract infections during pregnancy and exposure to antibiotics at delivery with wheezing disorders, in particular wheezing of early onset.(1). The most studied in utero environmental influence on lung development is maternal smoking in pregnancy, which has been shown to be associated not only with wheezing in childhood (2-5) but also with a dose-related reduction in lung function in the newborn period. Fetal development seems therefore to represent a critical time of pulmonary vulnerability with respect to smoking exposure. More recently, some studies have also investigated the relationships between exposure to maternal infections in pregnancy (6-8), maternal obstetric conditions (hyperemesis, hypertension, and preeclampsia) (9-11), uterine factors (antepartum hemorrhage, preterm contractions, placental insufficiency, and uterine growth restriction) (9-11), malposition or malpresentation of the fetus (11), mode of delivery (11)(12)(13)(14)(15)(16)(17)(18), and the development of asthma among offspring. However, the findings of these studies have been inconsistent.In a report published in 1999 (19), we found associations between a number of pre-, peri-, and early postnatal factors and different wheezing phenotypes in a large multicenter crosssectional population-based study, the SIDRIA (Italian Studies of Respiratory Disorders in Childhood and the Environment) phase 1 study, an extension of the International Study on Asthma and Allergies in Childhood (ISAAC) phase 1 study (20). The enrolled children were categorized, on the basis of criteria derived from Martinez and coworkers (21), as transient early wheezers (children with wheezing in the first 2 yr of life but not at school age), persistent wheezers (children who continued to wheeze at school age), late-onset wheezers (children who did not wheeze in the first years of life but who wheezed when 6-7 yr