SUMMARY An attempt was made to ascertain all cases of Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease occurring in England and Wales during the 5 year period 1980-1984. The mean annual mortality rate was 0-49/million; women were more frequently affected than men. The age-specific mortality rate reached a peak in the seventh decade. A case-control study involving 92 of the 122 definite and probable cases ascertained failed to confirm the reality of previously suspected aetiological agents in the environment. Although there was no confirmed instance of familial Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease in the case-control study, dementia in close relatives was significantly more common than in controls.
Two hundred and sixty seven patients with a definite or probable diagnosis of Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (CJD) were identified in an attempt to ascertain all cases of the disease in England and Wales in the period 1970-84. No evidence of space-time clustering of dates and places of onset was found for these cases. Two age-and sex-matched controls were selected for 72 of the 122 cases diagnosed in the period 1980-84 and life histories of places of residence were obtained for these cases and the controls. No evidence was found that cases had lived closer to each other than had controls at any time in their lives, except that there was an excess of cases born in London. The study does not provide supportive evidence for case-to-case transmission of CJD being an important component in the aetiology of the disease.
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