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Can Sugar Intake During Pregnancy Trigger Asthma in Child?

Can Sugar Intake During Pregnancy Trigger Asthma in Child?

by Julia Samuel on Jul 6 2017 2:13 PM
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Highlights

  • Maternal sugar intake during pregnancy increases the risk of allergic inflammation and asthma in the fetus.
  • Sugars, mainly in the form of fructose in sweetened beverages, soft drinks induces immune responses in the baby.
  • The offspring's free sugar intake in early childhood was found to have no association with the outcomes.
High intake of sugars in the form of added sugar, sweetened beverages, during pregnancy is linked to an increased risk of asthma in the offspring. //
While some research has reported an association between a high consumption of sugar-containing beverages and asthma in children, the relation between maternal sugar intake during pregnancy and allergy and asthma in the offspring has been little studied.

The team, which included researchers from University of Bristol, used data from a world-leading birth cohort study, the Avon Longitudinal Study of Parents and Children (ALSPAC), also known as 'Children of the 90s'. The cohort recruited mothers who were pregnant in the early 1990s and has been following up their offspring ever since.

Almost 9,000 mother-child pairs were analysed for associations between maternal intake of free sugars in pregnancy and allergy (defined by positive skin tests to common allergens, namely dust mite, cat and grass) and asthma at seven years of age.

Sugar Intake In Pregnancy - Is it Safe?

Data on maternal diet in pregnancy were collected by a food frequency questionnaire (FFQ) at 32 weeks gestation, covering all the main foods consumed in Britain.

The questionnaire asked about their current weekly frequency of consumption of 43 food groups and food items. More detailed questions were asked about daily consumption of a further eight basic foods (including sugar, coffee and tea).

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While there was only weak evidence for a link between free sugar intake in pregnancy and asthma overall, there were strong positive associations with allergy and allergic asthma (where the child was diagnosed with asthma and had positive skin tests to allergens).

When comparing the 20 percent of mothers with the highest sugar intake versus the 20 percent of mothers with the lowest sugar intake, there was an increased risk of 38 percent for allergy in the offspring (73 percent for allergy to two or more allergens) and 101 percent for allergic asthma. The team found no association with eczema or hay fever.

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Lead researcher Professor Seif Shaheen from QMUL said: "We cannot say on the basis of these observations that a high intake of sugar by mothers in pregnancy is definitely causing allergy and allergic asthma in their offspring. However, given the extremely high consumption of sugar in the West, we will certainly be investigating this hypothesis further with some urgency.

"The first step is to see whether we can replicate these findings in a different cohort of mothers and children. If we can, then we will design a trial to test whether we can prevent childhood allergy and allergic asthma by reducing the consumption of sugar by mothers during pregnancy. In the meantime, we would recommend that pregnant women follow current guidelines and avoid excessive sugar consumption."

Fructose Triggers Immune Response

Fructose, which is a major component of added sugars, and is present naturally in fruit juice and in sweetened drinks as added sucrose (ratio of fructose/glucose 50/50%) or isolated fructose, has been mooted as driving previous cross-sectional findings linking sugar-containing beverage consumption to asthma in children.

Fructose consumption, in the form of high fructose corn syrup (ratio of fructose/glucose 60/40%), increased from near 0% to near 30% of per capita consumption of refined sugars in the USA between 1970 and 2000, whereas the consumption of sucrose and glucose declined or remained constant.

The team speculate that the associations may be explained by a high maternal intake of fructose.
  • Fructose also causes generation of uric acid and experimental evidence in mice suggests that uric acid may be an essential initiator and amplifier of T-helper cell type 2 (Th2) immunity and allergic inflammation.
  • High fetal exposure to fructose may cause persistence of Th2 immune responses post-natally and allergic inflammation in the developing lung.
The researchers controlled for numerous potential confounders in their analyses, such as background maternal characteristics, social factors and other aspects of maternal diet, including foods and nutrients that have been previously linked to childhood asthma and allergy.

Importantly, the offspring's free sugar intake in early childhood was found to have no association with the outcomes seen in the analysis.

As the study is observational, it does not prove a causal link between maternal sugar intake and allergies or asthma. A randomised controlled trial would be needed to definitively test causality.

Reference
  1. Annabelle Bédard, Kate Northstone, A. John Henderson, Seif O. Shaheen, Maternal intake of sugar during pregnancy and childhood respiratory and atopic outcomes, European Respiratory Journal (2017) http://dx.doi.org/10.1183/13993003.00073-2017.


Source-Medindia


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