Introduction Numerous studies have characterised trajectories of asthma and allergy in children using machine learning, but with different techniques and mixed findings. The present work aimed to summarise the evidence and critically appraise the methodology. Methods 10 databases were searched. Screening, data extraction and quality assessment were performed in pairs. Trajectory characteristics were tabulated and visualised. Associated risk factor and outcome estimates were pooled using a random-effects meta-analysis. Results 89 studies were included. Early-onset (infancy) persistent, mid-onset (∼2–5 years) persistent, early-onset early-resolving (within ∼2 years) and early-onset mid-resolving (by ∼3–6 years) wheezing and eczema, respectively, were the most commonly identified disease trajectories. Intermediate/transient trajectories were rare. Male sex was associated with a higher risk of most wheezing trajectories and possibly with early-resolving eczema, while being slightly protective against mid-onset persistent eczema. Parental disease/genetic markers were associated with persistent trajectories of wheezing and eczema, respectively. Prenatal (and less so postnatal) tobacco smoke exposure was associated with most wheezing trajectories, as were lower respiratory tract infections in infancy (particularly with the early-onset resolving patterns). Most studies (69%) were of low methodological quality (particularly in modelling approaches and reporting). Few studies investigated allergic multimorbidity, allergic rhinitis and food allergy. Conclusions Childhood asthma/wheezing and eczema can be characterised by a few relatively consistent trajectories, with some actionable risk factors such as pre-/postnatal smoke exposure. Improved computational methodology is warranted to better assess generalisability and elucidate the validity of intermediate/transient trajectories. Likewise, allergic multimorbidity and trajectories of allergic rhinitis and food allergy need to be further elucidated.

Machine learning-derived asthma and allergy trajectories in children: a systematic review and meta-analysis / D. Lisik, S.S. Ozuygur Ermis, G.P. Milani, G.C.I. Spolidoro, S. Ercan, M. Salisu, F. Odetola, D.G. Ghiglioni, D. Pylov, E. Goksor, R. Basna, G. Wennergren, H. Kankaanranta, B.I. Nwaru. - In: EUROPEAN RESPIRATORY REVIEW. - ISSN 0905-9180. - 34:175(2025), pp. 240160.1-240160.14. [10.1183/16000617.0160-2024]

Machine learning-derived asthma and allergy trajectories in children: a systematic review and meta-analysis

G.P. Milani;G.C.I. Spolidoro;
2025

Abstract

Introduction Numerous studies have characterised trajectories of asthma and allergy in children using machine learning, but with different techniques and mixed findings. The present work aimed to summarise the evidence and critically appraise the methodology. Methods 10 databases were searched. Screening, data extraction and quality assessment were performed in pairs. Trajectory characteristics were tabulated and visualised. Associated risk factor and outcome estimates were pooled using a random-effects meta-analysis. Results 89 studies were included. Early-onset (infancy) persistent, mid-onset (∼2–5 years) persistent, early-onset early-resolving (within ∼2 years) and early-onset mid-resolving (by ∼3–6 years) wheezing and eczema, respectively, were the most commonly identified disease trajectories. Intermediate/transient trajectories were rare. Male sex was associated with a higher risk of most wheezing trajectories and possibly with early-resolving eczema, while being slightly protective against mid-onset persistent eczema. Parental disease/genetic markers were associated with persistent trajectories of wheezing and eczema, respectively. Prenatal (and less so postnatal) tobacco smoke exposure was associated with most wheezing trajectories, as were lower respiratory tract infections in infancy (particularly with the early-onset resolving patterns). Most studies (69%) were of low methodological quality (particularly in modelling approaches and reporting). Few studies investigated allergic multimorbidity, allergic rhinitis and food allergy. Conclusions Childhood asthma/wheezing and eczema can be characterised by a few relatively consistent trajectories, with some actionable risk factors such as pre-/postnatal smoke exposure. Improved computational methodology is warranted to better assess generalisability and elucidate the validity of intermediate/transient trajectories. Likewise, allergic multimorbidity and trajectories of allergic rhinitis and food allergy need to be further elucidated.
Settore MEDS-20/A - Pediatria generale e specialistica
2025
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2434/1163100
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