Trends in the epidemiology of asthma in England: a national study of 333,294 patients
Summary Background Observations in the UK at the end of the last century found increasing trends of asthma prevalence over time. However, it has been reported that the number of new cases of asthma presenting to general practice has declined, especially among younger children. Aim To study national...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Journal of the Royal Society of Medicine 2010-03, Vol.103 (3), p.98-106 |
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Zusammenfassung: | Summary
Background
Observations in the UK at the end of the last century found increasing trends of
asthma prevalence over time. However, it has been reported that the number of new
cases of asthma presenting to general practice has declined, especially among
younger children.
Aim
To study national trends in the epidemiology of asthma.
Methods
A cross-sectional observation analysis was performed using the QRESEARCH database,
which is one of the world's largest national aggregated health databases
containing records from 422 English practices yielding 30 million patient-years of
observation. Data was extracted on 333,294 individuals with a recorded diagnosis
of asthma and calculated annual age–sex standardized incidence, lifetime period
prevalence and asthma-related prescribing rates for each year from 2001–2005.
Results
The incidence rate of asthma decreased in all patients (2001: 6.9 (95% confidence
intervals [CI] 6.8–7.0); 2005: 5.2 (95% CI 5.1–5.3) per 1000 patient-years,
p65 years: 21.5%) with an estimated 5,658,900 (95% CI
5,639,700–5,678,200) or approximately one person in nine having being diagnosed
with asthma in England. The number of asthma-related prescriptions also increased
over the study period (17.1%), such that in 2005 an estimated 32,577,300 (95%CI
32,531,600–32,623,000) prescriptions were issued.
Conclusions
This large national study reveals that the rate of new diagnoses of asthma appears
to have passed its peak; however, the number of adults with a lifetime asthma
diagnosis continues to rise. Whether these trends are genuine or are a result of
the introduction of incentives and guidelines to improve identification and
recording of asthma or changing diagnostic trends is a question with important
public health implications and one, therefore, that warrants detailed further
enquiry. |
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ISSN: | 0141-0768 1758-1095 |
DOI: | 10.1258/jrsm.2009.090348 |