Asthma
Conference Coverage
Budesonide/Formoterol for Asthma Shows Cardiovascular Safety
Major Finding: Changes from baseline to treatment maximum for BUD/FM vs. BUD alone were similar for heart rate (9.87 vs. 9.04 beats/minute) and QT...
News
Alternaria Sensitization Common in Children With Severe Asthma
Major Finding: In a study of 187 children, 37% of those with severe asthma tested positive for Alternaria sensitization, compared with 21% of...
Conference Coverage
Food Allergies Up 33% in U.S. Kids
Major Finding: During 2007-2008, 4.8% of surveyed U.S.
Conference Coverage
Pill May Be an Alternative to Injections for Ragweed Immunotherapy
Major Finding: Daily oral treatment with the highest-dosage ragweed pollen pill produced a 24%-27% cut in total combined symptom scores, relative...
Conference Coverage
Nonrespiratory Symptoms Precede Loss of Asthma Control
Major Finding: The odds of a child having unusual nonrespiratory signs or symptoms were significant at 3 days, 2 days, and 1 day prior to an...
Conference Coverage
Steroid Exposure Risk High in 'Allergic Triad'
Major Finding: Treatment with corticosteroids for both conditions was found in 55% of children with asthma and allergic rhinitis, 59% of those...
News
Cost Sharing Linked to Rise in Asthma Hospitalizations
Major Finding: Higher out-of-pocket costs for prescription drugs correlated with a significant 2% reduction in the use of asthma control...
Conference Coverage
Can Allergy Shots Cut Asthma Risk?
Conference Coverage
Soluble CD14 in Cord Blood Predicts Wheeze, Cough at 1 Year
Major Finding: In a comparison of high vs. low soluble CD14 in cord blood, the adjusted odds ratio for wheeze at 1 year with high levels was 7.74...
Conference Coverage
Food Allergic Infants More Likely to Have Vitamin D Insufficiency
Major Finding: Vitamin D–insufficient infants were 3.8-fold more likely to have a food allergy than controls.Data Source: Findings were from an...
News
Food Allergy Exacerbates Pediatric Asthma Severity
Major Finding: Among asthmatic children in the U.S., 73% with a food allergy used controller medication vs.