Childhood asthma diagnoses declined during the COVID-19 pandemic in the United States

Published in Respiratory Research, March 10, 2023

Author(s): Daniel B Horton, Amanda L Neikirk, Yiling Yang, Cecilia Huang, Reynold A Panettieri Jr, Stephen Crystal, Brian L Strom, Lauren E Parlett

DOI: 10.1186/s12931-023-02377-7 | Pubmed ID: 36899362

Abstract

Background: Prior studies have documented declines in pediatric asthma exacerbations and asthma-related health care utilization during the COVID-19 pandemic, but less is known about the incidence of asthma during the pandemic.

Methods: We conducted a retrospective cohort study of children under age 18 without a prior diagnosis of asthma within a large US commercial claims database. Incident asthma was defined using a combination of diagnosis codes, location of services, and medication dispensing. Crude quarterly rates of asthma diagnosis per 1000 children were calculated, and the incidence rate ratio and 95% confidence interval were estimated for newly diagnosed asthma during versus before the pandemic using negative binomial regression, adjusted for age, sex, region, and season.

Results: Compared with 3 years prior to the pandemic, crude incident diagnosis rates of asthma decreased by 52% across the first four quarters of the US pandemic. The covariate-adjusted pandemic-associated incidence rate ratio was 0.47 (95% confidence interval 0.43, 0.51).

Conclusions: New diagnoses of childhood asthma in the US declined by half during the first year of the pandemic. These findings raise important questions whether pandemic-related changes in infectious or other triggers truly altered the incidence of childhood asthma beyond the well-described disruptions in healthcare access.

Keywords: Adolescent; Asthma/epidemiology; Child; Database; Pandemics.

© 2023. The Author(s).

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Tags

Analytic: incidence | multivariable regression

Data Source: claims | pediatric

Research Focus: covid | asthma | pandemic

Study Design: cohort study

Entry last updated (DMY): 02-12-2024.