Abstract
BackgroundKawasaki disease (KD) is a common cause of acquired paediatric heart disease in developed countries. KD was first identified in the 1960s in Japan, and has been steadily increasing since it was first reported. The aetiology of KD has not been defined, but is assumed to be infection-related. The present study sought to identify the factor(s) that mediate the geographical variation and chronological increase of KD in Japan.Methods and FindingsBased upon data reported between 1979 and 2010 from all 47 prefectures in Japan, the incidence and mean patient age at the onset of KD were estimated. Using spatial and time-series analyses, incidence and mean age were regressed against climatic/socioeconomic variables. Both incidence and mean age of KD were inversely correlated with the total fertility rate (TFR; i.e., the number of children that would be born to one woman). The extrapolation of a time-series regressive model suggested that KD emerged in the 1960s because of a dramatic decrease in TFR in the 1940s through the 1950s.ConclusionsMean patient age is an inverse surrogate for the hazard of contracting the aetiologic agent. Therefore, the observed negative correlation between mean patient age and TFR suggests that a higher TFR is associated with KD transmission. This relationship may be because a higher TFR facilitates sibling-to-sibling transmission. Additionally, the observed inverse correlation between incidence and TFR implies a paradoxical “negative” correlation between the incidence and the hazard of contracting the aetiologic agent. It was hypothesized that a decreasing TFR resulted in a reduced hazard of contracting the agent for KD, thereby increasing KD incidence.
Highlights
Kawasaki disease (KD), first reported in the 1960s in Japan [1], mainly afflicts children younger than 5 years of age
The observed negative correlation between mean patient age and total fertility rate (TFR) suggests that a higher TFR is associated with KD transmission
This relationship may be because a higher TFR facilitates sibling-to-sibling transmission
Summary
Kawasaki disease (KD), first reported in the 1960s in Japan [1], mainly afflicts children younger than 5 years of age. The advent of intravenous gamma-globulin therapy has dramatically improved prognosis [4,5], KD is the most common cause of acquired paediatric heart disease in developed countries [6]. The age of peak incidence is 1–2 years, which is similar to common viral infections. Kawasaki disease (KD) is a common cause of acquired paediatric heart disease in developed countries. KD was first identified in the 1960s in Japan, and has been steadily increasing since it was first reported. The present study sought to identify the factor(s) that mediate the geographical variation and chronological increase of KD in Japan
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