Dry air exposure linked to dehydration and inflammation in human airways

In a recent, cross-institutional study partially funded by the National Institutes of Health, researchers report that healthy human...

New project aims to help pin down the process of West Nile virus transmission

Mosquitoes have been transmitting the West Nile virus to humans in the United States for over 25 years,...

Common medicines contain hidden gluten and soy, study finds

Researchers reveal that widely used pain and fever medicines may harbor undeclared gluten or soy ingredients—raising concerns for...

Feeding infants diverse foods early may cut allergy risk, study reveals

New research reveals that feeding infants a variety of foods in their first year can help prevent allergies...

Scientists discover new strategy to fight back against norovirus

Scientists at The University of Texas at Austin, in collaboration with researchers from the University of North Carolina...

Children with peanut allergy achieve tolerance with gradual peanut butter ingestion

Eating gradually increasing doses of store-bought, home-measured peanut butter for about 18 months enabled 100% of children with...

Gut bacteria could one day serve as microscopic in-house pharmacists

Hundreds of different species of microbes live, laugh, and love in your gut. In the future, one of...

Increased allergy symptoms tied to changing climate patterns

A review published in The Laryngoscope indicates that climate change's effects on pollen seasons and concentrations are contributing...

Current antivirals not successful in treating severe H5N1 bird flu infections

As the H5N1 avian influenza outbreak continues, scientists are working to better understand the virus's threat to human...

Scientists uncover why Lyme disease symptoms may linger after treatment

Symptoms that persist long after Lyme disease is treated are not uncommon - a 2022 study found that 14%...

New study sharpens focus on genetic causes of asthma

Genome wide association studies (GWAS) have identified hundreds of genome regions containing thousands of genetic variants associated with...

Vitamin E supplementation may reduce food allergy development in newborns

New research found that supplementing maternal diet with α-tocopherol, a form of vitamin E, can reduce the development...

NIH researchers define topical steroid withdrawal diagnostic criteria

Researchers at the National Institutes of Health (NIH) have determined that dermatitis resulting from topical steroid withdrawal (TSW)...

Genomic sequencing-based detection system cuts infections and saves lives

An infectious diseases detection platform developed by University of Pittsburgh scientists working with UPMC infection preventionists proved over...

Probiotics improve emotional state in healthy adults, study finds

Daily mood reports reveal what traditional questionnaires miss — probiotics may lift negative emotions in healthy people, opening...

Single dose of antibody shields macaques from severe H5N1 influenza

National Institutes of Health (NIH) scientists and their colleagues report that a single dose of a broadly neutralizing...

Neuroimmune Mechanisms of Allergic Diseases and Depression: From Cytokine Cascade to Clinical Treatment Protocols

The relationship between allergic diseases and depression extends far beyond simple comorbidity, representing a fundamental neurobiological connection mediated...

Asthma and allergy rates higher among First Nations people in Australia

Researchers at The University of Queensland have found First Nations people are twice as likely to present at...

Synthetic microbiome therapy offers new hope against C. difficile infections

A synthetic microbiome therapy, tested in mice, protects against severe symptoms of a gut infection that is notoriously...

Race-neutral equation improves asthma diagnosis for Black children

Despite ongoing progress, structural racism and health disparities continue to shape healthcare practices in ways healthcare providers may...

Race-neutral equation improves asthma diagnosis for Black children

Despite ongoing progress, structural racism and health disparities continue to shape healthcare practices in ways healthcare providers may not even realize. A recent study in JAMA Network Open, published Feb. 28, 2025, shows that continued use of race-specific equations in the diagnostic process of children with asthma symptoms limits the identification of reduced lung function in Black children.

This finding is important because when these children are not identified as having reduced lung function, they may not receive further testing. This can lead to under-diagnosis, delayed treatment, and long-term lung health issues."

Gurjit Khurana Hershey, MD, PhD, senior author of the study

Addressing an outdated equation

Diagnosing children with asthma is a multi-step process.

Reports of asthma symptoms from a physician or parental guardian start the diagnosis. Children then participate in pulmonary function testing to assess their lung function, including forced expiratory volume in 1 second (FEV1) and forced vital capacity (FVC) tests. Children found to have abnormal lung function go on to further diagnostic testing.

Importantly, the FEV1 and FVC testing results in a percentage value compared to expected lung function. This expected lung function calculation is built into US spirometers–devices that measure lung function–and follows a standard equation using age, sex, body size and race.

Outdated and flawed studies led to the belief that white people have "naturally higher" lung function than other races. Thus, the calculation with race as a variable adjusts lung function by 10-15% for Black individuals and 4-6% for Asian individuals. However, this assumption and the resulting adjustments overlooks socioeconomic differences between racial groups. As a result, they unintentionally contribute to health disparities.

Updated equation still underused

In 2022, the Global Lung Initiative (GLI) Network updated lung function reference equations. To lower the negative impact of using race-specific equations, the new equations exclude race. However, healthcare providers have not universally adopted this new race-neutral equation.

The study led by first author Wan Chi Chang, MS, showed that the new race-neutral equation led to 2.5-4-fold more Black children with asthma symptoms as having reduced lung function compared to the race-specific equation.

This study included three cohorts of children from the Childhood Asthma Management Project (CAMP), the Cincinnati Childhood Allergy and Air Pollution Study (CCAAPS) and the Mechanisms of Progression of Atopic Dermatitis to Asthma (MPAACH) cohort. These cohorts include children with asthma or a high risk of asthma; 21% of these 1,533 children were Black. The use of the race-neutral equation changed 39% of all Black children from normal to reduced lung function when compared to the race-specific equation.

Additionally, when the race-neutral equation was used, 38-44% of Black children in the CCAAPS and MPAACH cohorts who were not initially eligible for further diagnostic testing became eligible. Importantly, using the race-neutral equation on White children had no meaningful impact on the lung function tests. These findings demonstrate that the race-specific equation overestimates lung function in Black children. This leads to under-diagnosis of asthma in this group.

Next steps

Co-authors of this study recommend the universal use of the race-neutral equation. This will increase the diagnosis and treatment of asthma and alleviate asthma-related health disparities. Moving forward, they propose further evaluations of the race-neutral equation in measuring lung function in other ethnic groups.

Source:

Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center

Journal reference:

Chang, W. C., et al. (2025). Race-Specific and Race-Neutral Equations for Lung Function and Asthma Diagnosis in Black Children. JAMA Network Open. doi.org/10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2024.62176.


Source: http://www.news-medical.net/news/20250228/Race-neutral-equation-improves-asthma-diagnosis-for-Black-children.aspx

Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
guest