Environ Health Perspect. 2009 April; 117(4): 500–507. | PMCID: PMC2679591 |
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Review
Childhood Asthma and Environmental Exposures at Swimming Pools: State of the Science and Research Recommendations
Clifford P. Weisel,1 Susan D. Richardson,2 Benoit Nemery,3 Gabriella Aggazzotti,4 Eugenio Baraldi,5 Ernest R. Blatchley, III,6 Benjamin C. Blount,7 Kai-Håkon Carlsen,8 Peyton A. Eggleston,9 Fritz H. Frimmel,10 Michael Goodman,11 Gilbert Gordon,12 Sergey A. Grinshpun,13 Dirk Heederik,14 Manolis Kogevinas,15,16,17,18 Judy S. LaKind,19 Mark J. Nieuwenhuijsen,20 Fontaine C. Piper,21 and Syed A. Sattar22
1 Environmental and Occupational Health Sciences Institute, Robert Wood Johnson Medical School/University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey, Piscataway, New Jersey, USA;
2 U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, National Exposure Research Laboratory, Athens, Georgia, USA;
3 Catholic University of Leuven, Research Unit of Lung Toxicology, Laboratory of Pneumology, Leuven, Belgium;
4 University of Modena and Reggio Emilia, Dipartimento di Scienze di Sanità Pubblica, Modena, Italy;
5 Department of Pediatrics, Unit of Allergy and Respiratory Medicine, University of Padova, Padova, Italy;
6 School of Civil Engineering, Purdue University, West Lafayette, Indiana, USA;
7 National Center for Environmental Health, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Atlanta, Georgia, USA;
8 Faculty of Medicine, University of Oslo, Norwegian School of Sport Sciences, Oslo, Norway;
9 Johns Hopkins University (retired), Baltimore, Maryland, USA;
10 Engler-Bunte-Institute, Department of Water Chemistry, University of Karlsruhe, Karlsruhe, Germany;
11 Department of Epidemiology, Rollins School of Public Health, Emory University, Georgia, USA;
12 Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, Miami University, Oxford, Ohio, USA;
13 Department of Environmental Health, University of Cincinnati, Cincinnati, Ohio, USA;
14 Division of Environmental and Occupational Health, The Netherlands Institute for Risk Assessment Sciences, University of Utrecht, Utrecht, The Netherlands;
15 Centre for Research in Environmental Epidemiology, Barcelona, Spain;
16 Municipal Institute of Medical Research (IMIM-Hospital del Mar), Barcelona, Spain;
17 CIBER Epidemiologia y Salud Pública, Spain;
18 Medical School, University of Crete, Heraklion, Greece;
19 LaKind Associates, LLC, Catonsville Maryland, USA;
20 Environmental Epidemiology, Parc de Recerca Biomèdica de Barcelona, Barcelona, Spain;
21 Truman State University (retired), Education Committee National Swimming Pool Foundation, Bushkill, Pennsylvania, USA;
22 Centre for Research on Environmental Microbiology, Faculty of Medicine, University of Ottawa, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada
Received March 26, 2008; Accepted September 30, 2008.
This review derives from a workshop held in Leuven, Belgium, in August 2007 to develop a research agenda that would lead to a better understanding of children’s exposure to disinfection by-products and biologics in the swimming pool environment and whether such exposures are associated with asthma. Other health end points are of interest to those investigating swimming pool exposures but were outside the scope of the workshop.
Swimming had been recommended as a sport for children with childhood asthma because there is experimental and observational evidence from short-term studies that swimming is less asthmagenic than other types of vigorous exercise and that asthmatics may tolerate swimming better than other types of physical activity. They may do so because of the horizontal position of the body during swimming, which alters the breathing pathway compared with other forms of exercise, or the high humidity present in indoor pools (
Bar-Yishay et al. 1982;
Bundgaard et al. 1982;
Fitch and Morton 1971;
Inbar et al. 1980;
Matsumoto et al. 1999;
Reggiani et al. 1988). However, increased ocular and respiratory symptoms and other adverse health end points have been reported in swimmers and attributed to exposure to disinfectants or their by-products. Adult airway hyperresponsiveness based on markers of inflammation has been reported to be more prevalent in elite swimmers than in controls or other athletes (
Belda et al. 2008;
Carlsen et al. 1989;
Helenius et al. 1998,
2002), but not in adolescent elite swimmers (
Pedersen et al. 2008). For lifeguards at swimming pools, an exposure–response relationship has been identified between trichloramine, measured as total chloramines, and irritant eye, nasal, and throat symptoms, although not chronic respiratory symptoms or bronchial hyperresponsiveness (
Massin et al. 1998). Adolescent competitive swimmers reported more lower and upper respiratory symptoms and eye irritation than a group of control athletes (indoor soccer players), and the number of symptoms reported by the swimmers was related to their exposure to chloramines (
Levesque et al. 2006). However, the amount of training of the swimmers exceeded that of the control group, and other end points such as wheezing during training and lifetime asthma were comparable for the two groups.
Markers of oxidative stimuli in the blood and symptoms of irritation have been also associated with higher exposure to chlorinated irritants in male swimmers 15–22 years of age (
Varraso et al. 2002). The prevalence of hay fever for adults increased for those who had spent more time at swimming pools when they were children, based on a recall questionnaire (
Kohlhammer et al. 2006). However, no increase in asthma prevalence or atopic dermatitis was found, although the authors indicated that the number of asthmatics may have been too small to detect an association. Outbreaks of ocular and respiratory illnesses having symptoms consistent with exposure to chloramine were reported for individuals who swam at hotel indoor pools, but the study design could not differentiate effects related to chemical agents from biological agents (
Bowen et al. 2007). High chloramine levels in hotel pools were associated with more eye irritation and skin rashes (
Kaydos-Daniels et al. 2008). In a case report, high air levels of chloramine have been proposed as causing occupational asthma in three pool workers (
Thickett et al. 2002). Swimming pool workers in the Netherlands had more general respiratory symptoms than did the general Dutch population, and the frequency of upper respiratory symptoms, but not lifetime or physician-diagnosed asthma, was related to exposure to chloramines at swimming pools (
Jacobs et al. 2007). Analyses of the Norwegian Mother and Child Cohort Study suggested that early baby swimming may be related to wheeze in toddlers, particularly for children with parental history of atopy, but the authors indicated that further investigation is warranted (
Nystad et al. 2008).
Kohlhammer and Heinrich (2007) reviewed published data on the relationship between chlorination byproducts in pool environments and effects on allergy and respiratory health and concluded that, for children, a trend of more frequent attendance at chlorinated pools could be an important factor in increasing frequencies of allergic disease and asthma.
Most studies of swimming pools and asthma have examined the association among adults or children of school age. However, several recent publications have explored whether exposure to respiratory irritants is associated with asthma in children who visit the indoor swimming pool environment when they are very young (
Bernard et al. 2003,
2006,
2007;
Carbonnelle et al. 2008;
Carraro et al. 2006;
Lagerkvist et al. 2004;
Nemery et al. 2002;
Nickmilder and Bernard 2007). Several studies have addressed pulmonary epithelium permeability based on serum biomarker levels, predictors of doctor-diagnosed asthma, elevated breath nitric oxide levels, and total and aeroallergen-specific serum immunoglobulin E (IgE) or wheezing in young children and their association with time spent attending indoor swimming pools as either schoolchildren or infants. These studies have yielded varying results (
Bernard et al. 2003,
2006,
2007;
Nickmilder and Bernard 2007). Swimming pool attendance in the first year of life was not associated with higher rates of atopic disease in a cohort in Germany (
Schoefer et al. 2008).
Disinfection of swimming pools is most commonly achieved with chlorine. The types of chlorine generally used are sodium hypochlorite (liquid bleach), calcium hypochlorite, or chlorine gas (
Ford 2007). For outdoor swimming pools, stabilized chlorine products are typically used (
Ford 2007). Free chlorine (largely in the forms of hypochlorous acid and hypochlorite ion) can react with precursor materials to form DBPs. Swimming pool water contains natural organic matter precursors not only from the tap water itself but also from bathers, including constituents of sweat and urine, skin particles, hair, microorganisms, cosmetics, and other personal care products. Swimming pool DBPs may include inorganic chloramines, organic chloramines, haloacetonitriles, and other organic compounds, some of which are volatile and known respiratory irritants (
Li and Blatchley 2007). Swimmers would be exposed to these DBPs, as well as the pool chemicals used as disinfectants that are irritants. There is evidence that irritant chemicals may contribute to the incidence of asthma in children and adults (
McConnell et al. 2002;
Medina-Ramón et al. 2005;
Rumchev et al. 2004;
Sherriff et al. 2005;
Zock et al. 2007).
These studies have brought to the fore important questions regarding respiratory health and swimming. Several important data gaps need to be filled in order to make a definitive determination as to whether new-onset asthma in children is caused by DBPs in swimming pool air—and if so, by what mechanism. The overarching questions addressed here are whether swimming or being at indoor pools, particularly by very young children, increases the risk of new childhood asthma, and if so, what factors in the environment of the pool may be responsible.
How should studies be designed to answer these questions? The multifactorial nature of asthma etiology and the difficulties in its diagnosis, together with our fragmentary understanding of the indoor pool environment, pool maintenance, and swimmer hygiene, make these questions truly challenging to address. We focus here on data needs and best study practices for four key areas necessary for fully understanding the relationship between the pool environment and childhood asthma: a) distinguishing between children with asthma and children without asthma, especially young children; b) exposure tools for assessing factors in the pool environment potentially associated with asthma; c) epidemiologic research issues; and d) pool operation and maintenance issues affecting DBP formation. The following sections provide an overview of these four subjects together with a series of key research recommendations.