학술논문

Low and high serum IgG associates with respiratory infections in a young and working age populationResearch in context
Document Type
article
Source
EBioMedicine, Vol 94, Iss , Pp 104712- (2023)
Subject
Birth cohort
Pneumonia
Respiratory tract infections
Immunoglobulins
Adaptive immunity
Smoking
Medicine
Medicine (General)
R5-920
Language
English
ISSN
2352-3964
Abstract
Summary: Background: We investigated health consequences and genetic properties associated with serum IgG concentration in a young and working age general population. Methods: Northern Finland Birth Cohort 1966 (NFBC1966, n = 12,231) health data have been collected from birth to 52 years of age. Relationships between life-long health events, medications, chronic conditions, lifestyle, and serum IgG concentration measured at age 46 years (n = 5430) were analysed. Regulatory mechanisms of serum IgG concentration were considered. Findings: Smoking and genetic variation (FCGR2B and TNFRSF13B) were the most important determinants of serum IgG concentration. Laboratory findings suggestive of common variable immunodeficiency (CVID) were 10-fold higher compared to previous reports (73.7 per 100,000 vs 0.6–6.9 per 100,000). Low IgG was associated with antibiotic use (relative risk 1.285, 95% CI 1.001–1.648; p = 0.049) and sinus surgery (relative risk 2.257, 95% CI 1.163–4.379; p = 0.016). High serum IgG was associated with at least one pneumonia episode (relative risk 1.737, 95% CI 1.032–2.922; p = 0.038) and with total number of pneumonia episodes (relative risk 2.167, 95% CI 1.443–3.254; p