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Work-Related Asthma: An Occupational Medicine Perspectiveopen access

Authors
Kim, YangwooKim, InahSong, Jaechul
Issue Date
May-2026
Publisher
KOREAN ACAD ASTHMA ALLERGY & CLINICAL IMMUNOLOGY
Keywords
Occupational asthma; epidemiology; isocyanates; occupational diseases; public health surveillance; Republic of Korea; workers' compensation
Citation
ALLERGY ASTHMA & IMMUNOLOGY RESEARCH, v.18, no.3, pp 323 - 338
Pages
16
Indexed
SCIE
SCOPUS
KCI
Journal Title
ALLERGY ASTHMA & IMMUNOLOGY RESEARCH
Volume
18
Number
3
Start Page
323
End Page
338
URI
https://scholarworks.bwise.kr/hanyang/handle/2021.sw.hanyang/213288
DOI
10.4168/aair.2026.18.3.323
ISSN
2092-7355
2092-7363
Abstract
Work-related asthma (WRA), encompassing occupational asthma and work-exacerbated asthma, is among the most prevalent yet preventable occupational respiratory diseases, with population-based studies estimating that 10% to 25% of adult asthma cases are attributable to workplace exposure. This review examines epidemiology, causative agents, pathogenesis, clinical evaluation, management, and WRA prevention from an occupational medicine perspective, with emphasis on Korean surveillance data. The Korea Work-related Asthma Surveillance program (2004–2009) identified 236 cases with a crude incidence of 3.31 per million workers, revealing a 40- to 90-fold detection gap when compared to European population-based estimates of 250 to 300 per million workers annually. Korean cases showed a distinctive agent profile, with isocyanates accounting for 46.6%—a figure that far exceeds the 13% to 23% in Western surveillance systems—which reflects the prominence of the furniture manufacturing industry. Temporal trends demonstrated successful prevention, with isocyanate-related cases decreasing from 65.0% to 26.9% during the period 2004–2009. Despite treatment advances, the prognosis remains poor: only 32% of patients achieve symptomatic recovery following the complete avoidance of exposure, and continued exposure increases the symptom burden 10-fold. Workers' compensation data confirm persistent underdiagnosis, with only 0 to 5 cases annually approved during the period 2013–2023 despite expanding recognition of occupational diseases overall. The Korea Occupational Disease Surveillance Center, established in 2022, offers an opportunity to bridge the prolonged surveillance gap. Clinicians treating working adults should maintain a high index of suspicion for the occupational causes of asthma, pursue early diagnosis and exposure cessation, and integrate workplace assessments into their routine clinical evaluations.
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Kim, Inah
서울 의과대학 (DEPARTMENT OF OCCUPATIONAL AND ENVIRONMENTAL MEDICINE)
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