Publications by authors named "Schaub B"

Background: Humans are subjected to various environmental stressors (bacteria, viruses, pollution) throughout life. As such, an inherent relationship exists between the effect of these exposures with age. The impact of these environmental stressors can manifest through DNA methylation (DNAm).

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  • This study investigates how farm dust may provide asthma protection in children by analyzing the immune responses of allergic asthmatics and healthy controls at a single-cell level.
  • Researchers used mass cytometry to measure changes in immune cell types and their activity after exposure to farm dust, finding significant changes in both innate and adaptive immune cells.
  • The results indicated that farm-dust exposure reduces asthma-related immune markers and alters T-cell and B-cell functions, suggesting potential mechanisms for the protective effects observed in children exposed to farm environments.
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  • - The study investigates how early-life risk factors from both host and environment interact with an infant's respiratory system to influence the development of wheezing and asthma over time.
  • - Researchers analyzed data from two large cohorts of healthy infants (BILD and PASTURE) to identify the effects of various factors on wheezing and asthma outcomes, specifically tracking symptom severity scores over the first year of life.
  • - Findings showed a complex dynamic interplay between different risk factors and breathing symptoms, ultimately highlighting the importance of these interactions in predicting respiratory health outcomes in young children.
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Introduction: Eosinophil-derived neurotoxin (EDN) is a biomarker for eosinophilic activation. Urinary (u) EDN may allow non-invasive monitoring of asthma, but clinical recommendations are lacking. We assessed the potential of uEDN as a marker of disease activity in pediatric asthma.

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Background: Numerous children present with early wheeze symptoms, yet solely a subgroup develops childhood asthma. Early identification of children at risk is key for clinical monitoring, timely patient-tailored treatment, and preventing chronic, severe sequelae. For early prediction of childhood asthma, we aimed to define an integrated risk score combining established risk factors with genome-wide molecular markers at birth, complemented by subsequent clinical symptoms/diagnoses (wheezing, atopic dermatitis, food allergy).

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  • - This study investigates how growing up on traditional farms in China might protect children from asthma and allergies, especially focusing on exposure to domestic poultry (DP) as a key factor.
  • - Researchers compared rural children with and without poultry exposure to urban children, finding differences in immune responses and blood cell counts, indicating that rural children exposed to poultry had reduced immune markers and eosinophil levels.
  • - The results suggest that exposure to poultry dust may provide benefits against asthma by altering immune responses, particularly by decreasing Th2 cytokines and inducing protective cytokines in a mouse asthma model.
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Background: As the most common chronic disease in childhood, asthma displays a major public health problem worldwide with the incidence of those affected rising. As there is currently no cure for allergic asthma, it is mandatory to get a better understanding of the underlying molecular mechanism.

Main Body: By producing IgE antibodies upon allergen contact, B cells play a pivotal role in allergic asthma.

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The strongest genetic risk factor for childhood-onset asthma, the 17q21 locus, is associated with increased viral susceptibility and disease-promoting processes. To identify biological targets underlying the escalated viral susceptibility associated with the clinical phenotype mediated by the 17q21 locus. Genome-wide transcriptome analysis of nasal brush samples from 261 children (78 healthy, 79 with wheezing at preschool age, 104 asthmatic) within the ALLIANCE (All-Age-Asthma) cohort, with a median age of 10.

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It has been shown that pollen information services are an important self-management tool for patients with pollen-related allergic rhinitis (AR) and allergic asthma (AA). This study aimed to design an online application for patients with AR and AA, which supports patients to better manage their disease as well as to evaluate the app and present the first results of the pilot study. The pollen data were obtained from the electronic pollen information network of Bavaria, Germany.

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Asthma represents a chronic respiratory disease affecting millions of children worldwide. The transition from preschool wheezing to school-age asthma involves a multifaceted interplay of various factors, including immunological aspects in early childhood. These factors include complex cellular interactions among different immune cell subsets, induction of pro-inflammatory mediators and the molecular impact of environmental factors like allergens or viral infections on the developing immune system.

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Background: Asthma is an inflammatory lung disease that constitutes the most common noncommunicable chronic disease in childhood. Childhood asthma shows large heterogeneity regarding onset of disease, symptoms, severity, prognosis, and response to therapy.

Main Body: Evidence suggests that this variability is due to distinct pathophysiological mechanisms, which has led to an exhaustive research effort to understand and characterize these distinct entities currently designated as "endotypes.

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Exhaled breath contains numerous volatile organic compounds (VOCs) known to be related to lung disease like asthma. Its collection is non-invasive, simple to perform and therefore an attractive method for the use even in young children. We analysed breath in children of the multicenter All Age Asthma Cohort (ALLIANCE) to evaluate if 'breathomics' have the potential to phenotype patients with asthma and wheeze, and to identify extrinsic risk factors for underlying disease mechanisms.

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  • A study was conducted to explore the relationship between maternal age and the prevalence of congenital heart defects (CHD) in Europe from 1995 to 2015 using data from the EUROCAT network, amidst conflicting evidence on this topic.
  • The research showed that CHD prevalence was higher in both younger mothers (≤24 years) and older mothers (35-44 years) compared to those aged 25-29 years, with specific severe CHD types more commonly seen in younger mothers.
  • The study identified increased prevalence rates for certain CHD subtypes, including double outlet right ventricle and hypoplastic heart syndromes, highlighting varying risks associated with different maternal age groups.
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Childhood asthma is a chronic heterogeneous syndrome consisting of different disease entities or phenotypes. The immunologic and cellular processes that occur during asthma development are still not fully understood but represent distinct endotypes. Mechanistic studies have examined the role of gene expression, protein levels, and cell types in early life development and the manifestation of asthma, many under the influence of environmental stimuli, which can be both protective and risk factors for asthma.

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Air pollution and immune-related diseases including allergy and asthma are constantly on the rise worldwide. Thus, a comprehensive investigation of environmentally induced immune regulation is required for a deeper understanding of disease pathogenesis, progression as well as prevention. Here, we summarize the current knowledge on environmental factors such as microbiome or geographical locations with harmful or protective effects for human health and their different routes of exposure.

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The current monkeypox disease (MPX) outbreak constitutes a new threat and challenge for our society. With more than 55,000 confirmed cases in 103 countries, World Health Organization declared the ongoing MPX outbreak a Public Health Emergency of International Concern (PHEIC) on July 23, 2022. The current MPX outbreak is the largest, most widespread, and most serious since the diagnosis of the first case of MPX in 1970 in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC), a country where MPX is an endemic disease.

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Amniotic band syndrome (ABS) and limb body wall complex (LBWC) have an overlapping phenotype of multiple congenital anomalies and their etiology is unknown. We aimed to determine the prevalence of ABS and LBWC in Europe from 1980 to 2019 and to describe the spectrum of congenital anomalies. In addition, we investigated maternal age and multiple birth as possible risk factors for the occurrence of ABS and LBWC.

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We aimed to describe adverse pregnancy outcomes among women who had symptomatic, RT-PCR-confirmed ZIKV infection and early childhood outcomes among their infants. We enrolled pregnant women with symptomatic, RT-PCR-confirmed ZIKV infection in a prospective cohort study, and their infants in a prospective pediatric cohort study. We defined adverse pregnancy and early childhood outcomes based on selected neurologic, ophthalmologic, auditory, musculoskeletal, and anthropometric abnormalities.

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Purpose: Insurers often commission psychiatric experts to evaluate the eligibility of workers with mental disorders for disability benefits, by estimating their residual work capacity (RWC). We investigated the validity of a standardized, computer-based battery of established diagnostic instruments, for evaluating the personality, cognition, performance, symptom burden, and symptom validity of claimants.

Methods: One hundred and fifty-three claimants for benefits were assessed by the assembled test battery, which was applied in addition to a conventional clinical work disability evaluation.

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Purpose: Parental exposures prior to conception might influence asthma and allergy risk in offspring. As occupational exposures are established risk factors for asthma and allergies, we investigated if parental occupational exposures prior to conception cause wheeze and eczema in offspring during the first year of life.

Methods: We analysed data of 436 families from an offspring cohort based on a follow-up study of German participants of the International Study of Asthma and Allergies in Childhood (ISAAC).

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Background: Although children can frequently experience a cough that affects their quality of life, few epidemiological studies have explored cough without a cold during childhood.

Objectives: The objective of the study was to describe the latent class trajectories of cough from one to 10 years old and analyse their association with wheezing, atopy and allergic diseases.

Methods: Questions about cough, wheeze and allergic diseases were asked at 1, 1.

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Background: An important window of opportunity for early-life exposures has been proposed for the development of atopic eczema and asthma.

Objective: However, it is unknown whether hay fever with a peak incidence around late school age to adolescence is similarly determined very early in life.

Methods: In the Protection against Allergy-Study in Rural Environments (PASTURE) birth cohort potentially relevant exposures such as farm milk consumption and exposure to animal sheds were assessed at multiple time points from infancy to age 10.

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Article Synopsis
  • The study analyzes the prevalence of nonsyndromic congenital heart defects (CHDs) in Europe from 2008 to 2015, using data from 25 EUROCAT registries across 14 countries.
  • The total prevalence of CHDs was found to be 57.1 per 10,000 births, with live birth prevalence at 60.2 per 10,000, indicating stability over the study period.
  • Trends varied by region, with Norway and England/Wales showing a decrease in prevalence, while Italy and Croatia saw increases, suggesting not all areas are experiencing the same trends.
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