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Overdiagnosis of COPD in Subjects With Unobstructed Spirometry

Authors :
Lea Sator
Andreas Horner
Michael Studnicka
Bernd Lamprecht
Bernhard Kaiser
Mary Ann McBurnie
A. Sonia Buist
Luisa Gnatiuc
David M. Mannino
Christer Janson
Eric D. Bateman
Peter Burney
NanShan Zhong
Shengming Liu
Jiachun Lu
Pixin Ran
Dali Wang
Jingping Zheng
Yumin Zhou
Ali Kocabaş
Attila Hancioglu
Ismail Hanta
Sedat Kuleci
Ahmet Sinan Turkyilmaz
Sema Umut
Turgay Unalan
Torkil Dawes
Eric Bateman
Anamika Jithoo
Desiree Adams
Edward Barnes
Jasper Freeman
Anton Hayes
Sipho Hlengwa
Christine Johannisen
Mariana Koopman
Innocentia Louw
Ina Ludick
Alta Olckers
Johanna Ryck
Janita Storbeck
Thorarinn Gislason
Bryndis Benedikdtsdottir
Kristin Jörundsdottir
Lovisa Gudmundsdottir
Sigrun Gudmundsdottir
Gunnar Gundmundsson
Ewa Nizankowska-Mogilnicka
Jakub Frey
Rafal Harat
Filip Mejza
Pawel Nastalek
Andrzej Pajak
Wojciech Skucha
Andrzej Szczeklik
Magda Twardowska
Tobias Welte
Isabelle Bodemann
Henning Geldmacher
Alexandra Schweda-Linow
Amund Gulsvik
Tina Endresen
Lene Svendsen
Wan C. Tan
Wen Wang
John Cain
Rebecca Copeland
Dana Hazen
Jennifer Methvin
Renato B. Dantes
Lourdes Amarillo
Lakan U. Berratio
Lenora C. Fernandez
Norberto A. Francisco
Gerard S. Garcia
Teresita S. de Guia
Luisito F. Idolor
Sullian S. Naval
Thessa Reyes
Camilo C. Roa
Ma. Flordeliza Sanchez
Leander P. Simpao
Christine Jenkins
Guy Marks
Tessa Bird
Paola Espinel
Kate Hardaker
Brett Toelle
Peter G.J. Burney
Caron Amor
James Potts
Michael Tumilty
Fiona McLean
E.F.M. Wouters
G.J. Wesseling
Cristina Bárbara
Fátima Rodrigues
Hermínia Dias
João Cardoso
João Almeida
Maria João Matos
Paula Simão
Moutinho Santos
Reis Ferreira
Inga Sif Olafsdottir
Katarina Nisser
Ulrike Spetz-Nyström
Gunilla Hägg
Gun-Marie Lund
Rain Jõgi
Hendrik Laja
Katrin Ulst
Vappu Zobel
Toomas-Julius Lill
Parvaiz A. Koul
Sajjad Malik
Nissar A. Hakim
Umar Hafiz Khan
Rohini Chowgule
Vasant Shetye
Jonelle Raphael
Rosel Almeda
Mahesh Tawde
Rafiq Tadvi
Sunil Katkar
Milind Kadam
Rupesh Dhanawade
Umesh Ghurup
Imed Harrabi
Myriam Denguezli
Zouhair Tabka
Hager Daldoul
Zaki Boukheroufa
Firas Chouikha
Wahbi Belhaj Khalifa
Fernando G. Ayuyao
Cecil Z. Tady
Daniel T. Tan
Sylvia Banal-Yang
Vincent M. Balanag
Maria Teresita N. Reyes
Sanjay Juvekar
Siddhi Hirve
Somnath Sambhudas
Bharat Chaidhary
Meera Tambe
Savita Pingale
Arati Umap
Archana Umap
Nitin Shelar
Sampada Devchakke
Sharda Chaudhary
Suvarna Bondre
Savita Walke
Ashleshsa Gawhane
Anil Sapkal
Rupali Argade
Vijay Gaikwad
Sundeep Salvi
Bill Brashier
Jyoti Londhe
Sapna Madas
Daniel Obaseki
Gregory Erhabor
Olayemi Awopeju
Olufemi Adewole
Source :
Chest. 156:277-288
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2019.

Abstract

Background There are several reports on underdiagnosis of COPD, while little is known about COPD overdiagnosis and overtreatment. We describe the overdiagnosis and the prevalence of spirometrically defined false positive COPD, as well as their relationship with overtreatment across 23 population samples in 20 countries participating in the BOLD Study between 2003 and 2012. Methods A false positive diagnosis of COPD was considered when participants reported a doctor's diagnosis of COPD, but postbronchodilator spirometry was unobstructed (FEV1/FVC > LLN). Additional analyses were performed using the fixed ratio criterion (FEV1/FVC Results Among 16,177 participants, 919 (5.7%) reported a previous medical diagnosis of COPD. Postbronchodilator spirometry was unobstructed in 569 subjects (61.9%): false positive COPD. A similar rate of overdiagnosis was seen when using the fixed ratio criterion (55.3%). In a subgroup analysis excluding participants who reported a diagnosis of "chronic bronchitis" or "emphysema" (n = 220), 37.7% had no airflow limitation. The site-specific prevalence of false positive COPD varied greatly, from 1.9% in low- to middle-income countries to 4.9% in high-income countries. In multivariate analysis, overdiagnosis was more common among women, and was associated with higher education; former and current smoking; the presence of wheeze, cough, and phlegm; and concomitant medical diagnosis of asthma or heart disease. Among the subjects with false positive COPD, 45.7% reported current use of respiratory medication. Excluding patients with reported asthma, 34.4% of those with normal spirometry still used a respiratory medication. Conclusions False positive COPD is frequent. This might expose nonobstructed subjects to possible adverse effects of respiratory medication.

Details

ISSN :
00123692
Volume :
156
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Chest
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........053bae6712a50407f68bce2023b459f3
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.chest.2019.01.015