Background
Atopic dermatitis (AD; aka eczema), affecting 10–20% of the paediatric population, has been linked to neuropsychological conditions and cognitive functioning, prompting this study to explore executive functions (EF) as a potential mechanism due to its role in high‐level thinking, decision making, and behavioural control.
Objectives
To examine how early childhood AD impacts
... [Show full abstract] middle‐childhood EF.
Methods
Our longitudinal study involved 11,373 children from the Avon Longitudinal Study of Parents and Children (ALSPAC), a United Kingdom birth cohort for whom parent‐reported AD activity and severity were measured at ≥2 time points between 6 months and 81 months of age. Latent class mixed modelling was used to classify children into 5 distinct early childhood AD trajectories: unaffected/rare (62.90%), early onset resolving AD (1.09%), persistent mild AD (31.35%), persistent moderate‐to‐severe AD (0.93%), and worsening AD (3.74%). Multivariate regression analysis was conducted to investigate the relationship between the AD trajectories and three components of executive function—attention, inhibition, and working memory—measured between 8 and 11 years old, adjusting for covariates.
Results
Across all EF measures, no statistically significant associations were observed with AD trajectories or cross‐sectional AD status at 81 months. Specifically, selective attention at age 8 showed no significant associations for “early onset resolving AD” (−0.04 [−0.38, 0.31], p = 0.83), “worsening AD” (0.05 [−0.14, 0.22], p = 0.60), “persistent mild AD” (−0.03 [−0.10, 0.05], p = 0.49), or “persistent moderate‐to‐severe AD” (0.02 [−0.31, 0.35], p = 0.69), with similar results for all other executive functions.
Conclusions
Our null findings suggest early childhood AD does not significantly affect middle‐childhood EF in a population mostly consisting of milder AD cases. Future studies focusing on children with severe AD and longitudinal research at other developmental stages are needed to clarify the AD‐neurocognitive function relationship.