Search results for "Baseline data"
showing 4 items of 14 documents
Triple therapy de-escalation to dual bronchodilation in COPD patients: Baseline data from the DACCORD cohort
2020
Background: GOLD recommends triple therapy only in COPD patients with frequent exacerbations despite long-acting bronchodilators who exhibit a high blood eosinophil level (≥300/μL). Indication for ICS containing therapy should be reassessed regularly. Methods: The German real life study DACCORD included COPD patients who had received free triple therapy for ≥ 6 months prior to study entry. At baseline, patients were switched to LABA+LAMA fixed-dose combination (FDC) or maintained triple therapy upon discretion of the treating physician. Here, we compare baseline data of the 2 groups. Results: 1182 patients were recruited into DACCORD of which 30.7% were moved to LABA+LAMA FDC. Patients in t…
Baseline data from a prospective international disease registry for Niemann-Pick disease type C
2011
Dental caries in Mexican schoolchildren : a comparison of 1988?1989 and 1998?2001 surveys
2012
Objectives: To compare two surveys across seven states for the prevalence of dental caries among Mexican schoolchildren. Study Design: Analysis of two cross-sectional surveys: Schoolchildren from 6 to 10 years of age were examined in the 1988–1989 survey and 6- to 10-year-old and 12-year-old students were included in the 1998–2001 survey. The baseline data of seven states were available for analysis. Representative probability samples were conducted statewide in both surveys. The World Health Organization (WHO) method was used to obtain the dental caries index (dmft, DMFT). At present, additional and more recent epidemiological data representative statewide in Mexico are unavailable. Result…
Improved femoral neck BMD in older Finnish women between 2002 and 2010.
2013
Abstract Purpose The number of hip fractures among Finns over 50-years of age rose constantly between 1970 and 1997, but since then, there has been a nationwide decline in incidence of hip fractures. One possible explanation, although not the only one, for the declining fracture rates, could be improved bone mineral density (BMD). The aim of this study was to evaluate differences in femoral neck BMD between older Finnish women born about a decade apart. Methods We compared the baseline data of two population-based samples of home-dwelling 70–80-year-old women who were initially recruited in exercise intervention studies ( N = 216 in Cohort1, and N = 389 in Cohort 2). Femoral neck BMD was …