Alessandra Marinoni
University of Pavia
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Featured researches published by Alessandra Marinoni.
European Respiratory Journal | 2012
R. de Marco; Veronica Cappa; Simone Accordini; Marta Rava; Leonardo Antonicelli; Oscar Bortolami; Marco Braggion; Massimiliano Bugiani; Lucio Casali; Lucia Cazzoletti; Isa Cerveri; Alessandro Fois; Paolo Girardi; Francesca Locatelli; Alessandro Marcon; Alessandra Marinoni; Maria Grazia Panico; Pietro Pirina; Simona Villani; Maria Elisabetta Zanolin; G. Verlato
The prevalence of asthma increased worldwide until the 1990s, but since then there has been no clear temporal pattern. The present study aimed to assess time trends in the prevalence of current asthma, asthma-like symptoms and allergic rhinitis in Italian adults from 1990 to 2010. The same screening questionnaire was administered by mail or phone to random samples of the general population (age 20–44 yrs) in Italy, in the frame of three multicentre studies: the European Community Respiratory Health Survey (ECRHS) (1991–1993; n=6,031); the Italian Study on Asthma in Young Adults (ISAYA) (1998–2000; n=18,873); and the Gene Environment Interactions in Respiratory Diseases (GEIRD) study (2007–2010; n=10,494). Time trends in prevalence were estimated using Poisson regression models in the centres that repeated the survey at different points in time. From 1991 to 2010, the median prevalence of current asthma, wheezing and allergic rhinitis increased from 4.1% to 6.6%, from 10.1% to 13.9% and from 16.8% to 25.8%, respectively. The prevalence of current asthma was stable during the 1990s and increased (relative risk 1.38, 95% CI 1.19–1.59) from 1998–2000 to 2007–2010, mainly in subjects who did not report allergic rhinitis. The prevalence of allergic rhinitis has increased continuously since 1991. The asthma epidemic is not over in Italy. During the past 20 yrs, asthma prevalence has increased by 38%, in parallel with a similar increase in asthma-like symptoms and allergic rhinitis.
International Archives of Allergy and Immunology | 2006
Simone Accordini; Massimiliano Bugiani; Walter Arossa; Simone Gerzeli; Alessandra Marinoni; M. Olivieri; Pietro Pirina; Laura Carrozzi; Rossano Dallari; Aldo De Togni; Roberto de Marco
Background/Aims: Up to now, few cost-of-illness (COI) studies have estimated the cost of adult asthma at an individual level on general population samples. We sought to evaluate the cost of current asthma from the societal perspective in young Italian adults and the determinants of cost variation. Methods: In 2000, a COI study was carried out in the frame of the Italian Study on Asthma in Young Adults on 527 current asthmatics (20–44 years) screened out of 15,591 subjects from the general population in seven centres. Detailed information about direct medical expenditures (DMEs) and indirect costs due to asthma was collected at an individual level over the past 12 months. Results: The mean annual cost per patient was EUR 741 (95% CI: 599–884). DMEs represented 42.8% of the total cost, whereas the remaining 57.2% was indirect costs. The largest component of DMEs was medication costs (47.3%; 23.0% was due to hospitalization). The mean annual cost per patient ranged from EUR 379 (95% CI: 216–541)for well-controlled asthmatics to EUR 1,341 (95% CI: 978–1,706) for poorly controlled cases that accounted for 46.2% of the total cost. Poor control, coexisting chronic cough and phlegm, and low socio-economic status were significantly associated with high DMEs and indirect costs. Conclusions: In Italy, asthma-related costs were substantial even in unselected patients and were largely driven by indirect costs. Since about half of the total cost was due to a limited proportion of poorly controlled asthmatics, interventions aimed at these high-cost patients could reduce the economic burden of the disease.
European Respiratory Journal | 1999
R. de Marco; Maria Elisabetta Zanolin; Simone Accordini; D Signorelli; Alessandra Marinoni; Massimiliano Bugiani; V. Lo Cascio; R Woods; P. Burney
In the early 1990s a multicentre survey on asthma was performed on the young adult population (European Community Respiratory Health Survey - ECRHS). This study is to be repeated in order to estimate changes in the prevalence of asthma-like symptoms during the last decade and to assess the social and economic costs of the disease and their variations among countries. The self-administered questionnaire devised for this purpose is a two-page questionnaire. The first page contains the same items as those used in the first survey with four additional questions related to: 1) the frequency and severity of asthma attacks; 2) the presence of chronic bronchitis; 3) smoking habits; and 4) a visual analogue scale assessing perception of outdoor pollution. The second page aims to collect information regarding the direct and indirect costs of asthma. The influence of the length of the questionnaire on the response rate was assessed in a pilot study in Italy. Two random samples of 150 subjects received either the one-page questionnaire (first page) or the two-page questionnaire. The response rate was compared with that obtained from the first postal wave in the 1991-1992 survey. Although the response rate was unchanged when using the one-page questionnaire (45% versus 45%), it decreased by 7% when the two-page questionnaire was used (38% versus 45%). On the basis of these results, no problem should arise if four more questions are added to the one-page questionnaire. The slight reduction in the response rate of the two-page questionnaire is worrying but could be corrected by the use of telephone interviews.
Allergy | 2007
Simone Accordini; Angelo Corsico; Isa Cerveri; David Gislason; Amund Gulsvik; Christer Janson; Deborah Jarvis; Alessandro Marcon; Isabelle Pin; P. Vermeire; Enrique Almar; Massimiliano Bugiani; Lucia Cazzoletti; Enric Duran-Tauleria; Rain Jögi; Alessandra Marinoni; Jesús Martínez-Moratalla; Bénédicte Leynaert; R. de Marco
Background: Few data are available on the asthma burden in the general population. We evaluated the level and the factors associated with the asthma burden in Europe.
Allergy | 2004
Maria Elisabetta Zanolin; Cristian Pattaro; Angelo Corsico; Massimiliano Bugiani; Laura Carrozzi; Lucio Casali; Rossano Dallari; Marcello Ferrari; Alessandra Marinoni; E. Migliore; Mario Olivieri; Pietro Pirina; G. Verlato; Simona Villani; R. de Marco
Background: Variations in the prevalence of respiratory symptoms according to geo‐climatic factors could provide important clues to the knowledge of the aetiology of asthma.
European Respiratory Journal | 2003
Isa Cerveri; Simone Accordini; Angelo Corsico; M. C. Zoia; Laura Carrozzi; Lucia Cazzoletti; Massimiliano Beccaria; Alessandra Marinoni; Giovanni Viegi; R. de Marco
The Global Initiative for Chronic Obstructive Lung Disease (GOLD) guidelines underline that the presence of chronic cough and sputum production before airflow obstruction offers a unique opportunity to identify subjects at risk of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease for an early intervention. Current epidemiological data on these subjects are scant. Between 1998–2000, the authors evaluated the prevalence and characteristics of these symptoms by a multicentre cross-sectional survey of Italian people aged between 20–44 yrs from the general population (Italian Study on Asthma in Young Adults (ISAYA)). Besides the questions on asthma, more than 18,000 subjects answered the question: “Have you had cough and phlegm on most days for as much as 3 months per year and for at least two successive years?” The adjusted prevalence of subjects with chronic cough and phlegm was 11.9%, being 11.8% in males and 12.0% in females. From these subjects ∼20% reported coexisting asthma and ∼30%, predominately females, were nonsmokers. The survey showed thatsex (female), smoking and low socioeconomic status were significantly and independently associated with chronic cough and phlegm, current smoking playing the major role. The prevalence of subjects with chronic cough and phlegm is startlingly high among young adults. Further follow-up studies are needed to establish how many of them will go on to develop chronic obstructive pulmonary disease.
Allergy | 2003
Roberto de Marco; Massimiliano Bugiani; Lucia Cazzoletti; Aurelia Carosso; Simone Accordini; Orazio Buriani; Laura Carrozzi; Rossano Dallari; Giuseppe Giammanco; Francesco Ginesu; Alessandra Marinoni; Vincenzo Lo Cascio; Albino Poli; Pierluigi Struzzo; Christer Janson
Background: Few data are available on the management of asthma in the general population. The aim of this study was to evaluate the level of asthma control in Italian patients, a decade after the publication of the international guidelines.
European Respiratory Journal | 2005
Christer Janson; R. de Marco; Simone Accordini; Enrique Almar; Massimiliano Bugiani; Adriana Carolei; Lucia Cazzoletti; Isa Cerveri; Angelo Corsico; Enric Duran-Tauleria; David Gislason; Amund Gulsvik; Rain Jögi; Alessandra Marinoni; Jesús Martínez-Moratalla; Isabelle Pin; P. Vermeire; Deborah Jarvis
The aim of this study was to describe changes in pharmacotherapy for asthma since the early 1990s in an international cohort of young and middle-aged adults. A total of 28 centres from 14 countries participated in a longitudinal study. The study included 8,829 subjects with a mean follow-up time of 8.7 yrs. Change in the prevalence of use for medication was expressed as absolute net change (95% confidence interval) standardised to a 10-yr period. The use of anti-asthmatics was found to have increased by 3.1% (2.4–3.7%) and the prevalence of symptomatic asthma by 4.0% (3.5–4.5%). In the sample with asthma in both surveys (n = 423), the use of inhaled corticosteroids increased by 12.2% (6.6–17.8%). Despite this, only 17.2% were using inhaled corticosteroids on a daily basis at follow-up. Females with continuous asthma were more likely, compared with males, and smokers with asthma, to have started using inhaled corticosteroids since the first survey. The use of anti-asthmatics has increased in a pattern consistent with current consensus on treatment. However, despite increased use of inhaled corticosteroids, a large majority of subjects with symptomatic asthma do not use this treatment on a daily basis, particularly males and smokers with asthma.
International Archives of Allergy and Immunology | 2005
Roberto de Marco; Lucia Cazzoletti; Isa Cerveri; Angelo Corsico; Massimiliano Bugiani; Simone Accordini; Laura Carrozzi; Rossano Dallari; Aldo De Togni; Alessandra Marinoni; Pietro Pirina; Christer Janson
Background: The guidelines for asthma recommend that the use of anti-inflammatory therapy should be adapted to the severity of the disease. However, few data are available to assess the adequacy of the use of drugs and its influence on the control of asthma in ‘real life’. Methods: The adequacy of the current use of anti-asthmatic medication according to the Global Initiative for Asthma (GINA) guidelines was assessed in a random sample of 400 asthmatics identified in the frame of the Italian Study on Asthma in Young Adults. Asthma severity was assessed using the GINA criteria; accordingly, a patient was classified as receiving inadequate treatment if his/her current use of drugs was lower than that suggested by the guidelines for the corresponding severity level. The absence of asthma attacks in the last 3 months was used as an indicator of the disease control. Results: Fifty-five percent of the patients had persistent asthma. Overall, 48% (95% CI 41.2–54.8) of persistent asthmatics were receiving inadequate treatment, and 66% (95% CI 59.5–72.4) had not used their medication daily over the past 3 months. Persistent asthmatics who were inadequately treated had a significantly greater frequency of asthma attacks (geometric mean ratio 3.7; 95% CI 2.1–6.6) than those using an adequate dose of medication. Mild and moderate persistent asthmatics using an adequate medication regimen reported a low number of asthma attacks (median 0). At the multivariate analysis, a good control of the disease was positively associated with an adequate dose of anti-inflammatory medication (OR = 2.2; 95% CI 1.1–4.5) and was negatively associated with a later onset of asthma (OR = 0.96; 95% CI 0.93–0.99) and severe asthma (OR = 0.37; 95% CI 0.17–0.81). Conclusions: Despite the increase in the use of inhaled corticosteroids, half of the persistent asthmatics from the general population are using a medication regimen below their severity level. When the use of drugs follows the GINA guideline recommendations, a good control of asthma is also achievable in the daily management of the disease, particularly in the case of mild and moderate asthmatics.
Respiratory Research | 2005
Roberto de Marco; Francesca Locatelli; Lucia Cazzoletti; Massimilian Bugianio; Aurelia Carosso; Alessandra Marinoni
BackgroundFew longitudinal data exist on the incidence of asthma in young adults and on the overall mortality risk due to asthma. A 7-year follow-up prospective study was performed to assess the incidence of asthma and mortality from all causes in a cohort of young adults.MethodsThe life status of a cohort of 6031 subjects, aged 20–44 years, who replied to a respiratory screening questionnaire between 1991 and 1992, was ascertained in 1999. A new questionnaire investigating the history of asthma was subsequently sent to the 5236 subjects who were still alive and residents in the areas of the study. 3880 subjects (74%) replied to the second questionnaire.ResultsThe incidence of adult-onset asthma was 15.3/10,000/year (95%CI:11.2–20.8). The presence of asthma-like symptoms (IRR:4.17; 95%CI:2.20–7.87) and allergic rhinitis (IRR:3.30; 95%CI:1.71–6.36) at baseline were independent predictors of the onset of asthma, which was more frequent in women (IRR:2.32; 95%CI:1.16–4.67) and increased in the younger generations.The subjects who reported asthma attacks or nocturnal asthma symptoms at baseline had an excess mortality risk from all causes (SMR = 2.05; 95%CI:1.06–3.58) in the subsequent seven years. The excess mortality was mainly due to causes not related to respiratory diseases.ConclusionAsthma occurrence is a relevant public health problem even in young adults. The likelihood of developing adult onset asthma is significantly higher in people suffering from allergic rhinitis, in women and in more recent generations. The presence of asthma attacks and nocturnal symptoms seems to be associated with a potential excess risk of all causes mortality.