2011
DOI: 10.1183/09031936.00143710
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Multi-symptom asthma as an indication of disease severity in epidemiology

Abstract: Epidemiological questionnaires have failed to identify individuals with severe asthma. The extent of symptoms of asthma can, however, be easily established in epidemiology, by identification of multiple symptoms. We hypothesise that reporting of multiple symptoms of asthma reflects uncontrolled disease and is a sign of more severe asthma. The aims of the current study were, therefore, to determine the prevalence and determinants of multi-symptom asthma.A postal questionnaire was sent to 30,000 randomly selecte… Show more

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Cited by 20 publications
(24 citation statements)
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“…Severity of asthma is difficult to measure in epidemiologic studies. However, the burden of respiratory symptoms may serve as a proxy for disease severity [20]. We found a higher prevalence of a large number of respiratory symptoms in AIA than in ATA.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 67%
“…Severity of asthma is difficult to measure in epidemiologic studies. However, the burden of respiratory symptoms may serve as a proxy for disease severity [20]. We found a higher prevalence of a large number of respiratory symptoms in AIA than in ATA.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 67%
“…Definitions of respiratory symptoms and exposure have been described in previous publications 19,25 . Severe asthma was defined as multisymptom asthma using a composite definition 26 . Further definitions included: growing up on a farm, ‘Did you live on a farm during your first 5 years of life?’ Family history of allergy, ‘Has any of your parents or siblings ever had allergic eye or nose problems (hay fever)?’ Family history of asthma, ‘Has any of your parents or siblings ever had asthma?’ Exposure to gas, dust or fumes at work, ‘Have you been substantially exposed to dust, gases or fumes at work?’…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…These characteristics include things like degree of bronchodilator responsiveness and persistent airflow limitation, presence/absence of atopy/allergy, obesity and inflammatory characteristics such as eosinophilia and neutrophilia. In addition, two recent large studies from the West Sweden Asthma Study suggest that rhinosinusitis and its symptoms, occupational exposures to gas, dust, fumes, smoking history and family histories of allergy/asthma, as well as female gender and old age are all characteristics, and in many cases, risk factors for multi‐symptom asthma (as a surrogate for more ‘severe’ asthma . Clinical, cluster and genetic studies are also suggesting that the characteristic of age at onset, when dividing between childhood and adult onset disease is a discriminatory characteristic .…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%