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Prevalence and clinical features of most frequent phenotypes in the Italian COPD population: the CLIMA Study

Authors :
Roberto W. Dal Negro
Mauro Carone
Giuseppina Cuttitta
Luca Gallelli
Massimo Pistolesi
Salvatore Privitera
Piero Ceriana
Pietro Pirina
Bruno Balbi
Carlo Vancheri
Franca M. Gallo
Alfredo Chetta
Paola Turco
On behalf of the CLIMA Study Group
Source :
Multidisciplinary Respiratory Medicine
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Background: Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) is a complex, progressive respiratory condition characterized by heterogeneous clinical presentations (phenotypes). The aim of this study was to assess the prevalence of the main COPD phenotypes and match each phenotype to the most fitting clinical and lung function profile.Methods: The CLIMA (Clinical Phenotypes in Actual Clinical Practice) study was an observational, cross-sectional investigation involving twenty-four sites evenly distributed throughout Italy. Patients were tentatively grouped based on their history and claimed prevailing symptoms at recruitment: chronic cough (CB, suggesting chronic bronchitis); dyspnoea (possible emphysema components, E); recurrent wheezing (presuming asthma components, A). Variables collected were: anagraphics; smoking habit; history of asthma; claim of >1 exacerbations in the previous year; blood eosinophil count; total blood IgE and alpha1 anti-trypsin (α1-AT) levels; complete lung function, and the chest X-ray report. mMRC, CAT, BCS, EQ5d-5L were also used. The association between variables and phenotypes were checked by Chi-square test and multinomial logistic regression.Results: The CB phenotype was prevalent (48.3%), followed by the E and the A phenotypes (38.8% and 12.8%, respectively). When dyspnea was the prevailing symptom, the probability of belonging to the COPD-E phenotype was 3.40 times higher. Recurrent wheezing was mostly related to the COPD-A phenotype. Lung function proved more preserved in the COPD-CB phenotype. Smoke; n. exacerbations/year; VR, and BODE index were positively correlated with the COPD-E phenotype, while SpO2, FEV1/FVC, FEV1/VC, and FEV1 reversibility were negatively correlated. Lower DLco values were highly probative for the COPD-E phenotype (p

Details

ISSN :
1828695X
Volume :
16
Issue :
1
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Multidisciplinary respiratory medicine
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....e84d1867a126d7fc118f1ac13fd05ac6