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Is Allergic Rhinitis Associated with Increased Severity Of Coexisting Asthma In Children And Adults? : A Comprehensive Systematic Review Nydia Ayu Ulima; Dhimas Reyhan Putra; Rajmil Shafira Salsabila
The International Journal of Medical Science and Health Research Vol. 37 No. 1 (2026): The International Journal of Medical Science and Health Research
Publisher : International Medical Journal Corp. Ltd

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.70070/hqdmmy88

Abstract

Introduction: Allergic rhinitis (AR) and asthma frequently coexist as manifestations of the unified allergic airway disease, yet the precise relationship between AR and asthma severity remains incompletely characterized across different age groups. This systematic review aimed to synthesize current evidence on whether AR is associated with increased severity of coexisting asthma in children and adults. Methods: A systematic review was conducted following PRISMA guidelines. Studies were screened based on predefined criteria including diagnosed asthma population, AR assessment using validated methods, measurement of asthma severity through clinical parameters, differentiation between allergic and non-allergic rhinitis, and appropriate observational or interventional study designs. Data extraction encompassed study characteristics, population demographics, AR diagnostic criteria, asthma severity measures, association results, age group effects, and effect modifiers. Results: Eighty studies published between 2002-2025 met inclusion criteria, comprising cross-sectional studies (n=62), cohort studies (n=12), systematic reviews (n=2), randomized controlled trials (n=2), and case-control studies (n=2). AR prevalence in asthmatic populations ranged from 29.2% to 97.5% across studies. The majority of studies (72/80, 90%) demonstrated a positive association between AR and increased asthma severity, manifested through poorer asthma control (OR range 1.21-2.74), more frequent exacerbations (incidence rate ratio 1.12), increased healthcare utilization (OR 2.64-2.98 for emergency visits), and impaired lung function (lower FEV₁, FEF₂₅–₇₅). AR severity correlated positively with asthma severity (correlation coefficients 0.365-0.689), with persistent and moderate-to-severe AR phenotypes consistently associated with difficult-to-control asthma. Treatment of AR, particularly with intranasal corticosteroids, was associated with improved asthma outcomes. Age-specific effects included stronger associations in school-age children compared to younger children (<6 years), and attenuation of prevalence in older adults. Discussion: The consistent positive association between AR and asthma severity across diverse populations supports the unified airway concept and has important clinical implications. The dose-response relationship between AR severity and asthma severity, coupled with improved asthma outcomes following AR treatment, suggests potential causal mechanisms including naso-bronchial reflex, systemic eosinophilic inflammation, and shared type-2 inflammatory pathways. However, heterogeneity in AR assessment methods and asthma severity definitions across studies limits direct comparability. Conclusion: Compelling evidence demonstrates that AR is associated with increased severity of coexisting asthma in both children and adults, with AR severity, persistence, and specific phenotypes serving as important determinants. Systematic assessment and optimal management of AR should be integrated into asthma care to potentially improve asthma outcomes.
The Relationship between Environmental Tobacco Smoke Exposure and Decreased Lung Function in Adolescents : A Comprehensive Systematic Review Nydia Ayu Ulima; Rajmil Shafira Salsabila
The Indonesian Journal of General Medicine Vol. 36 No. 1 (2026): The Indonesian Journal of General Medicine
Publisher : International Medical Journal Corp. Ltd

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.70070/ep7bwr84

Abstract

Introduction: Environmental tobacco smoke (ETS) exposure remains a significant public health concern, particularly for adolescents whose lungs are undergoing critical development. Despite declining smoking rates in many countries, millions of adolescents worldwide continue to be exposed to ETS in their homes and communities. This systematic review aims to comprehensively evaluate the relationship between ETS exposure and decreased lung function in adolescents aged 10-19 years. Methods: A systematic review was conducted following established guidelines. Twenty sources were included after screening based on predefined criteria: adolescent population age range (10-19 years), validated ETS exposure measurement, standardized lung function assessment, appropriate observational study design, focus on passive exposure, objective outcome measurement, and general population health status. Data extraction encompassed study characteristics, ETS exposure assessment methods, lung function measures, primary associations, effect sizes, dose-response evidence, effect modifiers, and confounding control. Results: The predominant finding across studies was a negative association between ETS exposure and lung function parameters. Small airway measures (FEF25-75, FEF25) were most consistently affected, with He et al. reporting β = −0.104 (p=0.020) for FEF25-75 growth rate. FEV1 annual growth reduction of −0.34% (95% CI: −0.64% to −0.04%) was documented by Milanzi et al. Dose-response relationships were demonstrated in multiple studies. Critical effect modifiers included sex (girls showing greater vulnerability with FEV1 reduction of −272 ml/s in perinatally exposed females), genetic polymorphisms (β2-adrenoceptor and GSTP1 variants), timing of exposure (prenatal and early childhood windows most critical), and synergistic interactions with active smoking. Discussion: The evidence consistently supports a negative association between ETS exposure and adolescent lung function, with biological plausibility strengthened by acute exposure studies demonstrating immediate effects. Heterogeneity in effect sizes is explained by differences in exposure timing, measurement methods, and population susceptibility. Methodological limitations include variability in confounding control and exposure assessment. Conclusion: ETS exposure is significantly associated with decreased lung function in adolescents, with evidence of dose-response relationships and modification by sex, genetics, and exposure timing. Recommendations include strengthening smoke-free legislation, targeted interventions for vulnerable populations, routine clinical screening, and further research with standardized methodologies.