0000000000863160
AUTHOR
S. Baldacci
Respiratory disease phenotypes in a general population sample: latent transition analysis
Background: Few data are available on the temporal pattern of respiratory disease phenotypes in general population. Aim: To detect longitudinal patterns of disease phenotypes related to risk factors and physician visits. Methods: Pisan general population sample from 2 cross-sectional studies (PI1: 1991-93; PI2: 2009-11; n=1107), questionnaire-based data. Latent transition analysis (LTA) was performed to assess respiratory disease phenotypes at PI1 and PI2, labelled according to disease/symptom occurrence. Possible patterns were persistence, worsening and improvement of the phenotype. Multiple logistic regression models were estimated to assess the association among phenotype patterns, risk …
Longitudinal Asthma Patterns in Italian Adult General Population Samples: Host and Environmental Risk Factors.
Background: Asthma patterns are not well established in epidemiological studies. Aim: To assess asthma patterns and risk factors in an adult general population sample. Methods: In total, 452 individuals reporting asthma symptoms/diagnosis in previous surveys participated in the AGAVE survey (2011–2014). Latent transition analysis (LTA) was performed to detect baseline and 12-month follow-up asthma phenotypes and longitudinal patterns. Risk factors associated with longitudinal patterns were assessed through multinomial logistic regression. Results: LTA detected four longitudinal patterns: persistent asthma diagnosis with symptoms, 27.2%
Issue 1 - “Update on adverse respiratory effects of outdoor air pollution”. Part 1): Outdoor air pollution and respiratory diseases: A general update and an Italian perspective
Objective: to summarize the main updated evidence about the health effects of air pollution and to focus on Italian epidemiological experiences on the respiratory effects. Results: The recent literature indicates that there is strong evidence for causal relationships between PM2.5 air pollution exposure and all-cause mortality as well as mortality from acute lower respiratory infections, ischaemic heart disease, stroke, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, and lung cancer. A growing body of evidence also suggests causal relationships with type II diabetes and impacts on neonatal mortality from low birth weight and short gestation as well as neurologic effects in both children and adults. …