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Annals of Family Medicine 2:110-115 (2004)
© 2004 Annals of Family Medicine, Inc.
doi: 10.1370/afm.40

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Article

The Natural History of Asthma in a Primary Care Cohort

Vince WinklerPrins, MD1, Lotte van den Nieuwenhof, MD2, Henk van den Hoogen, PhD, JHJ2, Hans Bor2 and Chris van Weel, MD, PhD2

1 Department of Family Practice, Michigan State University, East Lansing, Mich
2 Department of General Practice, University of Nijmegen, Nijmegen, The Netherlands

CORRESPONDING AUTHOR: Lotte van den Nieuwenhof, MD, Department of General Practice, University Medical Centre St. Radboud, 229-HSV, PO Box 9101, 6500 HB Nijmegen, The Netherlands, l.vandennieuwenhof{at}hag.umcn.nl

BACKGROUND We examined the natural history of asthma in a primary care cohort of patients 10 years after the cohort was stratified for asthma risk by responses to a questionnaire and bronchial hyperresponsiveness (BHR) testing.

METHODS Children and young adults who were born between 1967 and 1979 within 1 of 4 affiliated family practices of the Nijmegen Department of Family Medicine, the Netherlands, were asked to participate in an asthma study in 1989. Of 926 patients available, 581 (63%) agreed to participate. Their family physicians’ diagnoses of upper and lower respiratory tract disease and asthma were prospectively collected during the next 10 years and were analyzed.

RESULTS BHR or the presence of asthma symptoms at screening did not result in a significantly disproportionate number of physician visits during the next 10 years for 4 or more upper or lower respiratory tract infections when compared with patients who did not have these findings at the beginning of the study. The presence of asthma symptoms correlated with an increased risk of an asthma diagnosis or allergic rhinitis in the group of patients who did not have asthma diagnosed at start of the study. One half of the known asthmatic patients at the onset of the study (21 of 44) had no further visits to their physicians for treatment of asthma during the next 10 years.

CONCLUSIONS In primary care, BHR testing has limited value in predicting subsequent respiratory tract disease for patients who have asthma diagnosed by a physician. The use of symptom questionnaires can be of clinical use in predicting asthma.

Key Words: Registries/epidemioloy • bronchial hyperreactivity • asthma, symptoms • diagnosis




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TRACK Comments:

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The Natural History of Asthma in a Primary Care Cohort
Eric A. Jackson, PharmD
Annals of Family Medicine, 6 Apr 2004 [Full text]
Asthma natural history and diagnosis
Mike Thomas, et al.
Annals of Family Medicine, 15 Apr 2004 [Full text]
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H. John Fardy
Annals of Family Medicine, 16 Apr 2004 [Full text]
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Lotte van den Nieuwenhof, et al.
Annals of Family Medicine, 29 Apr 2004 [Full text]
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Brett G Toelle, et al.
Annals of Family Medicine, 9 May 2004 [Full text]
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