Journal article

Paternal prepubertal passive smoke exposure is related to impaired lung function trajectories from childhood to middle age in their offspring

J Liu, JL Perret, CJ Lodge, D Vicendese, G Bowatte, AJ Lowe, NS Idrose, P Frith, R Wood-Baker, GD Mishra, JW Holloway, C Svanes, MJ Abramson, EH Walters, SC Dharmage, DS Bui

Thorax | Published : 2026

Abstract

Introduction Paternal prepubertal passive smoke exposure may increase the risk of childhood asthma. However, its association with impaired lung function trajectories at risk of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease in offspring was not investigated. We assessed the association between paternal prepubertal passive smoke exposure and lung function from childhood to middle age in their offspring. Methods Data were analysed from 890 father-offspring pairs from the Tasmanian Longitudinal Health Study. The offspring were probands in the original cohort who underwent spirometry at six time points from ages 7 to 53 years. Lung function (forced expiratory volume in 1 s (FEV1), forced vital capacity (..

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