Abstract
The epidemiology of achalasia was studied in a predominantly urban, Jewish population of approximctely 1.3 million, in central Israel, during the years 1973–1983. One hundred sixty-two proven cases were collected, representing all known patients with achalasia in the study area. There were no gender differences. The majority of cases were diagnosed within two years of onset of symptoms, although the median delay in diagnosis was 4.4±5.3 years. The disease was rare in the first two decades of life. The prevalence (in 1983) in the first two decades was 0.7/105 rising to 36.2/105 above age 70. The mean annual incidence in the years 1973–1978 was 0.8/105. It rose slightly to a mean annual incidence of 1.1/105 in the years 1979–1983. The prevalence of the disease in 1973 and 1983 was 7.9/105 and 12.6/105, respectively. The age-adjusted prevalence in 1973 was higher in Asian and African born Jews as compared to those born in Europe, America, or Israel. This difference disappeared by the year 1983. No case of cancer of the esophagus was found among our patients. This may be due to the nonselected, regional nature of our series or to the effects of earlier therapy of achalasia in recent decades.
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Arber, N., Grossman, A., Lurie, B. et al. Epidemiology of achalasia in central israel rarity of esophageal cancer. Digest Dis Sci 38, 1920–1925 (1993). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF01296119
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/BF01296119