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Prevalence trends of rhinoconjunctivitis, eczema, and atopic asthma in Greek schoolchildren: Four surveys during 1991‐2008

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After a continuous increase of asthma, hay fever, and eczema during 1991‐2003 among schoolchildren in Patras, Greece, the prevalence of current wheeze/asthma (diagnosed wheezing and/or asthma in the past 2 years) has reached a plateau (6.9%) during the period 2004‐2008. Using methodology identical to the three previously conducted cross-sectional, parental questionnaire surveys (1991, n = 2417; 1998, n = 3076; 2003, n = 2725) we examined further trends in the prevalence of rhinoconjunctivitis and eczema in the same urban environment among third and fourth grade schoolchildren (8‐9 years old) in 2008 (n = 2688). In the four surveys, respective prevalence rates of rhinoconjunctivitis were 2.1, 3.4, 4.6, and 5.1% (absolute prevalence increase: 1998 versus 1991, 61.9%; 2003 versus 1998, 35.5%; 2008 versus 2003, 10.9%) and those of eczema were 4.5, 6.3, 9.5, and 10.8% (absolute prevalence increase: 1998 versus 1991, 40.0%; 2003 versus 1998, 50.8%; 2008 versus 2003, 13.7%; sex-adjusted p for trend, <0.001). Among current wheezer/asthmatic patients there was an increase in lifetime rhinoconjunctivitis (sex-adjusted p for trend, <0.001) and lifetime eczema (sex-adjusted p for tend, <0.001) over the period 1991‐2008. The proportion of atopic wheeze/asthma (current asthma with lifetime rhinoconjunctivitis and/or eczema) increased further during 2003‐2008 (p < 0.05; p for trend during 1991‐2008, <0.001). In conclusion, there is a continuous increase in the prevalence of allergic manifestations—rhinoconjunctivitis and eczema—among preadolescent children in Patras, Greece, during the period 1991‐2008. After a steep rise during 1991‐2003, the frequency of atopic wheeze/asthma continued to increase at a decelerating rate during 2003‐2008, while wheeze/asthma prevalence remained unchanged during the same 5-year period.

Keywords: Atopic asthma; Greece; children; eczema; epidemiology; hay fever; prevalence; questionnaire survey; rhinoconjunctivitis; wheeze

Document Type: Research Article

Publication date: 01 November 2011

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