Abstract
Aim:
To investigate the symptom patterns of elderly patients registered as active asthmatics.
Method:
An observational study using a database of 393 practices from throughout the United Kingdom. Participating practices provided health-service resource-use and symptom data for 30 randomly selected asthma patients. 8,244 adults, (16+ years), were stratified into three age groups, 4315(52%) aged 16–44, 2339(28%) 45–64, and 1590(19%) 65+. Comparisons were made for management and outcome measures (attack incidence, symptoms, health service resource use, drug therapies) between the groups.
Results:
Patients over 64 years old experienced more morning and exercise symptoms(p<0.001) and had more hospital admissions(p<0.001). They received higher levels of medication(p<0.001), were more compliant(p<0.001), but had poorer inhaler technique(p<0.001).
Conclusion:
Despite higher medication levels, 1,164(73%) patients over 64 years reported symptoms, 430(37%) of these, daily. For older patients, where regular symptoms are present despite high medication levels, investigation for diagnoses other than asthma should be routine.
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Hoskins, G., McCowan, C., Thomas, G. et al. Asthma or COPD? An inwestigation into the symptom patterns of asthma may highlight the need for more rigorous diagnostic procedures in elderly patients. Prim Care Respir J 10, 99–102 (2001). https://doi.org/10.1038/pcrj.2001.38
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/pcrj.2001.38