Abstract

BackgroundThe prevalence of asthma has increased over recent decades and the reasons for this are poorly understood. A sensitive tool that can evaluate potential risk factors for asthma is bronchial hyperresponsiveness (BHR), a key physiological characteristic of asthma. However, although the minimum clinically important difference in BHR for an individual is accepted to be around one doubling dose, the minimum important change in a population is not defined. As with surrogate measures of cardiovascular disease risk such as blood pressure and cholesterol, a change that is not clinically important in an individual may be extremely important in public health terms.FindingsTo assess the potential impact of a small absolute change in BHR across a population, we modelled the effect of different changes in BHR on the prevalence rates of moderate and severe BHR in an asthmatic population. We calculate that a one half doubling dose increase in BHR increases the prevalence of moderate and severe BHR by 30%. If this was accompanied by an equivalent increase in the population prevalence of moderate and severe asthma, this would be highly significant in public health terms.ConclusionsWe propose that a one half doubling dose worsening in BHR across a population may represent an important change.Electronic supplementary materialThe online version of this article (doi:10.1186/2213-0802-1-4) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.

Highlights

  • The prevalence of asthma has increased over recent decades and the reasons for this are poorly understood

  • We propose that a one half doubling dose worsening in bronchial hyperresponsiveness (BHR) across a population may represent an important change

  • By exponentiation this represents a change in cumulative prevalence rate ratio of 1.73 per doubling dose change in BHR

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Summary

Introduction

The prevalence of asthma has increased over recent decades and the reasons for this are poorly understood. A sensitive tool that can evaluate potential risk factors for asthma is bronchial hyperresponsiveness (BHR), a key physiological characteristic of asthma. The minimum clinically important difference in BHR for an individual is accepted to be around one doubling dose, the minimum important change in a population is not defined. As with surrogate measures of cardiovascular disease risk such as blood pressure and cholesterol, a change that is not clinically important in an individual may be extremely important in public health terms

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