# Parental asthma and risk of offspring asthma from childhood to adolescence: a population-based cohort study

**Authors:** Marianne Rørholt Grefslie, Siri Eldevik Håberg, Maria C Magnus, Tone K Omsland, Per Magnus

PMC · DOI: 10.1136/bmjresp-2025-003608 · BMJ Open Respiratory Research · 2026-01-20

## TL;DR

This study finds that children of mothers with asthma are more likely to develop asthma themselves, even into adolescence, compared to children of fathers with asthma.

## Contribution

The study shows that the higher risk of asthma in children of asthmatic mothers persists into adolescence, with a potential stronger effect in boys.

## Key findings

- Children of mothers with asthma had higher odds of asthma at ages 3, 7, and 14 compared to children of non-asthmatic parents.
- Maternal asthma was associated with a stronger risk of asthma in offspring than paternal asthma at all ages studied.
- The risk associated with maternal asthma was slightly higher in boys at age 3, though not statistically significant.

## Abstract

Maternal asthma has been associated with a higher risk of asthma in early childhood compared with paternal asthma, but it is unclear whether this difference persists into adolescence.

We analysed 55 643 children from the Norwegian Mother, Father and Child Cohort Study. Parental asthma was self-reported during pregnancy; offspring asthma was reported by mothers at ages 3, 7 and 14 years. Logistic regression models estimated associations between parental asthma and offspring asthma at each age, adjusting for maternal age, parental prepregnancy body mass index, parental education, parental smoking and parental atopic conditions, including atopic eczema and pollen/hay fever.

Asthma prevalence among offspring was 6.5% at age 3, 5.2% at age 7 and 5.4% at age 14. Compared with children of non-asthmatic parents, adjusted ORs for asthma at age 3 were 3.11 (95% CI 2.73 to 3.54) for maternal asthma only and 2.25 (95% CI 1.97 to 2.56) for paternal asthma only. Similar patterns were observed at ages 7 (maternal OR 2.96 (95% CI 2.54 to 3.45); paternal OR 2.36 (95% CI 2.03 to 2.75)) and 14 (maternal OR 3.03 (95% CI 2.46 to 3.73); paternal OR 1.95 (95% CI 1.57 to 2.43)). At age 3, maternal asthma was associated with higher odds in boys (OR 3.30) than girls (OR 2.82), and higher absolute risk (19.2% vs 12.2%). However, interaction tests by offspring sex were not statistically significant.

Maternal asthma conferred a consistently stronger risk of offspring asthma than paternal asthma, from early childhood into adolescence. This effect appeared slightly stronger in boys in early childhood, though sex differences were not statistically significant.

## Linked entities

- **Diseases:** asthma (MONDO:0004979), atopic eczema (MONDO:0004980)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** Asthma (MESH:D001249), atopic conditions (MESH:C566404), hay fever (MESH:D006255), atopic eczema (MESH:D003876), asthmatic (MESH:D013224)

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

41 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12820850/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12820850