Maternal allergy-preventive diet index, offspring infant diet diversity, and childhood allergic diseases

Type Article

Journal Article

Authors

Venter C, Pickett-Nairne K, Leung D, Fleischer D, O'Mahony L, Glueck DH, Dabelea D.

Year of publication

2025

Publication/Journal

Allergy

Volume

79

Issue

12

Pages

3475-3488

Abstract

Background: Studies of childhood diet diversity and allergic disease have not examined additional associations with an offspring allergy-linked maternal diet index during pregnancy. We studied both associations in a pre-birth cohort. Methods: Offspring allergic disease diagnoses were obtained from electronic medical records. Maternal and infant diet were self-reported. Adjusted parametric Weibull time-to-event models assessed associations between maternal diet index, infant diet diversity and time to development of allergic rhinitis, atopic dermatitis, asthma, wheeze, IgE-mediated food allergy, and a combined outcome of any allergic disease except for wheeze. Results: Infant diet diversity at 1 year was associated with the risk of the combined outcome between 1 and 4 years of age (p = .002). While both maternal diet index and infant diet diversity at 1 year were associated with the risk of the combined outcome between 1 and 4 years of age (both p < .05), infant diet diversity at 1 year did not modify the association between maternal diet index and the risk of the combined outcome between 1 and 4 years of age (p = .5). The group with the lowest risk of the combined allergy outcome had higher maternal diet index and higher infant diet diversity. Conclusions: The novel finding that both maternal diet index during pregnancy and infant diet diversity at 12 months are associated with the risk of a combined allergic disease outcome points to two targets for preventive interventions: maternal diet index scores during pregnancy and offspring diet diversity during infancy.