Publications by authors named "Christina G Tischer"

The numbers of international collaborations among birth cohort studies designed to better understand asthma and allergies have increased in the last several years. However, differences in definitions and methods preclude direct pooling of original data on individual participants. As part of the Mechanisms of the Development of Allergy (MeDALL) Project, we harmonized data from 14 birth cohort studies (each with 3-20 follow-up periods) carried out in 9 European countries during 1990-1998 or 2003-2009.

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Article Synopsis
  • Asthma, rhinitis, and eczema are linked through complex genetic and environmental factors, involving both IgE and non-IgE mechanisms.
  • The MeDALL project researched these links by tracking 44,010 participants across 14 European birth cohorts, using various epidemiological and mechanistic approaches over several years.
  • Findings revealed that only 38% of cases of multimorbidity (having multiple allergies) are related to IgE sensitization, highlighting the need for a new understanding of allergy that includes distinct phenotypes for sensitization and multimorbidity.
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Background: Eczema, rhinitis, and asthma often coexist (comorbidity) in children, but the proportion of comorbidity not attributable to either chance or the role of IgE sensitisation is unknown. We assessed these factors in children aged 4-8 years.

Methods: In this prospective cohort study, we assessed children from 12 ongoing European birth cohort studies participating in MeDALL (Mechanisms of the Development of ALLergy).

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Environmental exposures during pregnancy and early life may have adverse health effects. Single birth cohort studies often lack statistical power to tease out such effects reliably. To improve the use of existing data and to facilitate collaboration among these studies, an inventory of the environmental exposure and health data in these studies was made as part of the ENRIECO (Environmental Health Risks in European Birth Cohorts) project.

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Each day we are exposed to a complex mixture of microbial agents and components in indoor environments. A major part of this mixture derives from fungal and bacterial origin. The impact between those microbial agents in the home environment in relation to respiratory health in children is still a major issue in research.

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