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Occupational Medicine Advance Access published online on February 27, 2008

Occupational Medicine, doi:10.1093/occmed/kqn007
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© The Author 2008. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Society of Occupational Medicine. All rights reserved. For Permissions, please email: journals.permissions@oxfordjournals.org

Fifteen-year trends in occupational asthma: data from the Shield surveillance scheme

N. Diar Bakerly1, V. C. Moore2, A. D. Vellore2, M. S. Jaakkola3, A. S. Robertson3 and P. S. Burge3

1 Department of Respiratory Medicine, Salford Royal Foundation Trust, Stott Lane, Salford M6 8HD, UK
2 Occupational Lung Disease Unit, Heart of England NHS Foundation Trust, Birmingham Heartlands Hospital, Bordesley Green East, Birmingham B9 5SS, UK
3 Occupational Lung Disease Unit, Birmingham Chest Clinic, 151 Great Charles Street, Birmingham B3 3HX, UK

Background Trends of occupational asthma (OA) differ between regions depending on local industries, provisions for health and safety at the workplace and the availability of a reporting scheme to help in data collection and interpretation.

Aim To assess trends in OA in an industrialized part of the UK over a 15-year period.

Methods Occupational and chest physicians in the West Midlands were invited to submit details of newly diagnosed cases with OA. Data were then transferred to the regional centre for occupational lung diseases for analysis.

Results A total of 1461 cases were reported to the scheme. Sixty-eight per cent were males with mean (standard deviation) age of 44 (12) years. The annual incidence of OA was 42 per million of working population (95% CI = 37–45). OA was most frequently reported in welders (9%) and health care-related professions (9%) while <1% of cases were reported in farmers. Isocyanates were the commonest offending agents responsible for 21% of reports followed by metal working fluids (MWFs) (11%), adhesives (7%), chrome (7%), latex (6%) and glutaraldehyde (6%). Flour was suspected in 5% of cases while laboratory animals only in 1%.

Conclusions Our data confirm a high annual incidence of OA in this part of the UK. MWFs are an emerging problem, while isocyanates remain the commonest cause. Incidence remained at a fairly stable background level with many small and a few large epidemics superimposed. Schemes like Midland Thoracic Society's Rare Respiratory Disease Registry Surveillance Scheme of Occupational Asthma could help in identifying outbreaks by linking cases at the workplace.

Keywords      Metal working fluid; occupational asthma; prevalence; isocyanates; shield; welders


Correspondence to: N. Diar Bakerly, Salford Royal Foundation Trust, Stott Lane, Salford M6 8HD, UK. e-mail: ndbakerly{at}hotmail.com


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