The highest SMRs in the diabetic cohort were for diabetes and liver cirrhosis. The mortality risk for cardiovascular diseases, although significantly higher than expected, was much lower in Italian type 2 diabetic patients than that reported for American patients. The evidence of an early effect on mortality suggests that prevention, early diagnosis, and treatment should be improved.
The prevalence of asthma increased worldwide until the 1990s, but since then there has been no clear temporal pattern.The present study aimed to assess time trends in the prevalence of current asthma, asthma-like symptoms and allergic rhinitis in Italian adults from 1990 to 2010.The same screening questionnaire was administered by mail or phone to random samples of the general population (age 20-44 yrs) in Italy, in the frame of three multicentre studies: the European Community Respiratory Health Survey (ECRHS) (1991-1993; n56,031); the Italian Study on Asthma in Young Adults (ISAYA) (1998-2000; n518,873); and the Gene Environment Interactions in Respiratory Diseases (GEIRD) study (2007-2010; n510,494). Time trends in prevalence were estimated using Poisson regression models in the centres that repeated the survey at different points in time.From 1991 to 2010, the median prevalence of current asthma, wheezing and allergic rhinitis increased from 4.1% to 6.6%, from 10.1% to 13.9% and from 16.8% to 25.8%, respectively. The prevalence of current asthma was stable during the 1990s and increased (relative risk 1.38, 95% CI 1.19-1.59) from 1998-2000 to 2007-2010, mainly in subjects who did not report allergic rhinitis. The prevalence of allergic rhinitis has increased continuously since 1991.The asthma epidemic is not over in Italy. During the past 20 yrs, asthma prevalence has increased by 38%, in parallel with a similar increase in asthma-like symptoms and allergic rhinitis.
Sex differences in asthma prevalence and morbidity, assessed with different methods in different populations, have raised several hypotheses about the different susceptibility to asthma in men and women. However, information on the incidence of asthma by age and sex is limited. The aim of this study was to estimate the age- and sex-specific incidence of asthma from birth to 44 yr of age in men and women across several countries, and to evaluate the main factors influencing asthma incidence in young adults. The data of the European Community Respiratory Health Survey, an international, cross-sectional, population-based survey, which were collected in 16 countries from 1991 to 1993 according to a common protocol, and which pertained to 18,659 subjects, were analyzed retrospectively, using the reported age of the first attack as the onset of asthma. During childhood, girls had a significantly lower risk of developing asthma than did boys (relative risk [RR]: 0.74 and 0.56 in the 0- to 5-yr and 5- to 10-yr age classes, respectively). Around puberty, the risk was almost equal in the two sexes (RR = 0.84; 95% confidence interval [CI]: 0.65 to 1.10 in the 10 to 15-yr age class). After puberty, the risk in women was always significantly higher than that in men (RR: 1.38 to 5.91). This pattern was consistent in all of the 16 countries studied, and was not influenced by recall or cohort effects. When the effects of airway caliber and smoking were studied with a case-control design, the results showed that women's greater susceptibility to asthma in early adulthood was at least partly, explained by their smaller airway caliber (the OR decreased from 2. 04 [95% CI: 1.32 to 3.15] to 1.47 [95% CI: 0.89 to 2.44] after controlling for height-adjusted FEV(1)); while smoking did not increase the risk. This analysis strongly confirms that the incidence of asthma shows a sex reversal during puberty, and suggests that airway caliber, in addition to hormonal factors, could play an important role in explaining the different patterns of asthma incidence in men and women.
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