Impact of asthma severity on long-term asthma control
收藏Taylor & Francis Group2021-05-22 更新2026-04-16 收录
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https://tandf.figshare.com/articles/dataset/Impact_of_asthma_severity_on_long-term_asthma_control/12018036
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<b>Background:</b> Asthma is a common childhood disease with significant morbidity. Severe asthma accounts for just 4–6% of patients, but this group is more difficult to treat and is responsible for up to 40% of asthma expenses. <b>Objective:</b> The relationship between asthma severity and control is not well characterized. The main objective of this study was to determine impact of asthma severity on asthma control over time. <b>Methods:</b> This was a three year, prospective observational cohort study at a tertiary care children’s hospital. Results were compared over time and between patients with severe and non-severe persistent asthma. Intervention included therapy based on severity and control, accompanied by a NAEPP (EPR-3) guidelines based structured asthma education program. <b>Results:</b> The sample included 471 children referred from primary care offices with the diagnosis of persistent asthma, mean age 6.4 ± 2.4 years. Forty-one children (8.7%) had severe persistent asthma and 430 (91.3%) children had non-severe persistent asthma (mild-moderate persistent). Our sample size decreased over the three-year period and the number of patients completing the third year were 176 (38%) and among them 20 (11.4%) had severe asthma. At the initial visit, children with severe persistent asthma had significantly more acute care needs, more daily symptoms, and lower mean Asthma Control Test™ scores compared to children with non-severe persistent asthma. Differences between groups decreased within six months with significant improvements in most indicators persisting throughout three-year follow up in both groups (<i>p</i> <b>Conclusion:</b> Asthma control improves independent of severity if asthma guidelines are followed.
创建时间:
2020-03-23



