The Trends in Airway Obstructive Disease Morbidity in the Tucson Epidemiological Study
- 1 September 1989
- journal article
- Published by American Thoracic Society in American Review of Respiratory Disease
- Vol. 140 (3)
- https://doi.org/10.1164/ajrccm/140.3_pt_2.s35
Abstract
An analysis of the incidence and prevalence rates of airway obstructive diseases (AOD) has been conducted in adults in the Tucson community population under study, covering nine surveys, 1972 to 1985 inclusive. It was found that rates of diagnoses increased from initial surveys within each age group, possibly due to the effect of the study per se. The rates increased even more in each age cohort until age 65, demonstrating the effects of aging. Cohort changes in smoking were greater than cross-sectional differences between age groups. The incidence rates of diagnoses with functional impairment are about 7/1000 and are greater in smokers and in males. The new cases of AOD were defined both by functional impairment and/or physician diagnoses. They had lower pulmonary function at the initial examination. This implies a natural history of AOD that starts well before clinical diagnoses. New cases of diseases had a variegated set of associated risk factors. In addition to smoking, there were contributions made by reports of childhood respiratory disease, family history, occupational exposures, alcohol consumption, and IgE (in asthma alone or with other AOD). Use of reported diagnostic endpoints as well as functional impairment contributed more to the understanding of the possible etiology of AOD. Some increases in AOD rates may be a function of more careful study, but cohort rate increases seen in a careful longitudinal study show that a real increase in AOD is likely.Keywords
This publication has 9 references indexed in Scilit:
- Longitudinal Changes in Forced Expiratory Volume in One Second in AdultsAmerican Review of Respiratory Disease, 1987
- Assessment of Air vs Helium-Oxygen Flow-Volume Curves as an Epidemiologic Screening TestChest, 1984
- Risk Factors for Airways Obstructive DiseasesChest, 1984
- Assessment of alpha-1-antitrypsin deficiency heterozygosity as a risk factor in the etiology of emphysema. Physiological comparison of adult normal and heterozygous protease inhibitor phenotype subjects from a random population.Journal of Clinical Investigation, 1979
- The relationship of socio-environmental factors to the prevalence of obstructive lung diseases and other chronic conditionsJournal of Chronic Diseases, 1977
- Mortality in relation to smoking: 20 years' observations on male British doctors.BMJ, 1976
- TUCSON EPIDEMIOLOGIC STUDY OF OBSTRUCTIVE LUNG DISEASESAmerican Journal of Epidemiology, 1975
- A Community Study of the Relation of Alpha1-Antitrypsin Levels to Obstructive Lung DiseasesNew England Journal of Medicine, 1975
- Environmental epidemiology. IV. Chronic respiratory disease in an industrial town: a nine-year follow-up study. Preliminary report.American Journal of Public Health and the Nations Health, 1968