Background and objective: Knowledge regarding lung function after moderately preterm birth is limited. We therefore investigated lung function at early school age and adolescence among children born moderately preterm.
Methods: Data were used from the Swedish prospective birth cohort BAMSE (Swedish abbreviation for Children, Allergy, Milieu, Stockholm, Epidemiology study; N = 4089), with a 4.8% prevalence of moderate to late preterm birth defined as a gestational age of 32 to 36 weeks. Participants underwent spirometry at ages 8 and 16 years, and impulse oscillometry additionally at age 16 years. In total, 2621 children (149 preterm and 2472 term) provided lung function data.
Results: At age 8 years, adjusted forced expiratory volume in 1 second was lower in preterm female subjects (-64 mL [95% confidence interval (CI): -118 to -10]) compared with term female subjects but not in preterm male subjects. At age 16 years, both genders in the preterm group demonstrated lower forced expiratory volume in 1 second (female subjects: -116 mL [95% CI: -212 to -20]; male subjects: -177 mL [95% CI: -329 to -25]) compared with the term group. For the preterm group, impulse oscillometry demonstrated higher adjusted resistance at 5 Hz (female subjects: 31.3 Pa·L(-1)·s(-1) [95% CI: 6.3 to 56.3]; male subjects: 34.9 Pa·L(-1)·s(-1) [95% CI: 12.0 to 57.7]) and frequency dependence of resistance (resistance at 5 and 20 Hz) for male subjects (20.9 Pa·L(-1)·s(-1) [95% CI: 9.8 to 31.9]) compared with the term group.
Conclusions: Measures of airway function assessed in adolescence were reduced in children born moderate to late preterm, and no catch-up in lung function between ages 8 and 16 years was observed.
Copyright © 2016 by the American Academy of Pediatrics.