Smeeth Liam, Cook Claire, Fombonne Professor Eric, Heavey Lisa, Rodrigues Laura C, Smith Peter G, Hall Andrew J
Department of Epidemiology and Population Health, London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, Keppel Street, London WC1E 7HT, UK.
BMC Med. 2004 Nov 9;2:39. doi: 10.1186/1741-7015-2-39.
There has been concern that the incidence of autism and other pervasive developmental disorders (PDDs) is increasing. Previous studies have been smaller, restricted to autism (excluding other pervasive developmental disorders such as Asperger's syndrome), included boys only, or have not been based on a national sample. We investigated time trends in the rates of diagnosis of pervasive developmental disorders.
We analysed the rates of first diagnosis of pervasive developmental disorders among people registered with a practice contributing to the United Kingdom General Practice Research Database during the period 1988 to 2001. We included 1410 cases from over 14 million person-years of observation. The main outcome measures were rates of diagnosis of pervasive developmental disorders by year of diagnosis, year of birth, gender and geographical region.
The rate increased progressively from 0.40/10,000 person-years (95% CI 0.30 to 0.54) in 1991 to 2.98/10,000 (95% CI 2.56 to 3.47) in 2001. A similar change occurred in the age standardised incidence ratios, from 35 (95% CI: 26-47) in 1991 to 365 (95% CI: 314-425) in 2001. The temporal increase was not limited to children born during specific years nor to children diagnosed in a specific time period. The rate of diagnosis of PDDs other than autism rose from zero for the period 1988-1992 to 1.06/10,000 person-years in 2001. The rate of diagnosis of autism also increased but to a lesser extent. There was marked geographical variation in rates, with standardised incidence ratios varying from 66 for Wales to 141 for the South East of England.
Better ascertainment of diagnosis is likely to have contributed to the observed temporal increase in rates of diagnosis of PDD, but we cannot exclude a real increase.
人们一直担心自闭症及其他广泛性发育障碍(PDD)的发病率正在上升。以往的研究规模较小,仅限于自闭症(不包括阿斯伯格综合征等其他广泛性发育障碍),仅纳入男孩,或者并非基于全国性样本。我们调查了广泛性发育障碍诊断率的时间趋势。
我们分析了1988年至2001年期间向英国全科医疗研究数据库提供数据的医疗机构登记人群中广泛性发育障碍的首次诊断率。我们纳入了1400多万人年观察期内的1410例病例。主要观察指标为按诊断年份、出生年份、性别和地理区域划分的广泛性发育障碍诊断率。
该比率从1991年的0.40/10000人年(95%可信区间0.30至0.54)逐步上升至2001年的2.98/10000(95%可信区间2.56至3.47)。年龄标准化发病率也有类似变化,从1991年的35(95%可信区间:26 - 47)升至2001年的365(95%可信区间:314 - 425)。时间上的增加并不局限于特定年份出生的儿童,也不局限于特定时间段诊断出的儿童。1988 - 1992年期间,除自闭症外的PDD诊断率为零,到2001年升至1.06/10000人年。自闭症的诊断率也有所上升,但幅度较小。发病率存在明显的地理差异,标准化发病率从威尔士的66到英格兰东南部的141不等。
诊断的更好确定可能导致了观察到的PDD诊断率随时间上升,但我们不能排除实际的上升情况。