Objective: To estimate the independent contribution of birth weight to asth
ma prevalence among children younger than 4 years in the United States and
to compare the magnitude of its effect on asthma between African American a
nd white children.
Design: Cross-sectional analysis using the 1988 National Maternal-infant He
alth Survey and 1991 Longitudinal Follow-up Survey.
Setting: United States.
Patients: Eight thousand seventy-one subjects, selected from a randomized,
systematic population-based sample and weighted to be nationally representa
tive, who completed both initial and longitudinal follow-up surveys and rep
orted information on asthma diagnosis.
Main Outcome Measures: Birth weight and other sociodemographic factors link
ed to birth outcome were analyzed for independent association with physicia
n-diagnosed asthma by age 3 years.
Results: The prevalence of asthma varied by birth weight category: 6.7% in
children 2500 g or more at birth, 10.9% in children 1500 to 2499 g at birth
, and 21.9% in children less than 1500 g at birth (very low birth weight [V
LBW]) (P<.001). Some of the characteristics shown to be independently assoc
iated with asthma included: VLBW (odds ratio [OR], 2.9; 95% confidence inte
rval [CI], 2.3-3.6), moderately low birth weight (OR, 1.4, 95% CI, 1.1-1.8)
, and African American race (OR, 1.9; 95% CI, 1.6-2.4). In stratified analy
ses, the independent association between VLBW and asthma in white and Afric
an American populations was: ORwhite 3.1 (95% CI, 2.24.3) and ORAfrican Ame
rican, 2.5 (95% CI, 2.0-3.3). The prevalence of VLBW, however, was tripled
in African American compared with white children (1.8% vs 0.6%).
Conclusions: These data confirm findings of other studies that identify a s
trong independent association between low birth weight and asthma. For this
1988 national birth cohort, an estimated 4000 excess asthma cases were att
ributable to birth weight less than 2500 g. Although the strength of the in
dependent association between VLBW and asthma was smaller in the African Am
erican population, the substantially increased prevalence of VLBW in this c
ommunity may contribute to the disproportionately increased prevalence of a
sthma among African American children.