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RESEARCH PRODUCT

GOLD Staging System is Appropriate to Predict Mortality in Older People With Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease

Vincenzo BelliaRenato GiuaNicola ScichiloneRaffaele Antonelli-incalziClaudio Pedone

subject

BODE indexPulmonary and Respiratory Medicinemedicine.medical_specialtyPopulationPulmonary diseaseSettore MED/10 - Malattie Dell'Apparato Respiratorio03 medical and health sciencesFEV1/FVC ratioFEV10302 clinical medicineElderlyInternal medicinemedicine030212 general & internal medicineGOLDeducationStaging systemCOPDeducation.field_of_studybusiness.industryChronic obstructive pulmonary diseaseHazard ratioGeneral Medicinerespiratory systemmedicine.diseaserespiratory tract diseases030228 respiratory systemQuartilebusiness

description

Abstract Introduction In the new GOLD classification the reduction of FEV1, expressed as percentage of predicted value (FEV1PP), is considered an important prognostic factor. However, the use of FEV1PP may introduce bias, especially if based on equations derived from populations different from the one under study. We evaluated how well the GOLD classification stratifies the mortality risk when FEV1PP is based on an equation developed in the same population that gave rise to cases, externally developed equations, or as FEV1 divided by cubed height (FEV1/Ht3). Methods We studied 882 participants aged ≥65 years. Bronchial obstruction was defined using a fixed cut-off of 0.7 for FEV1/FVC. Predicted values of FEV1 were derived from equations based on the same sample of the cases included in this study and from the European Respiratory Society equations. Severity of bronchial obstruction was also classified according to quartiles of FEV1/Ht3. Results All the classification systems showed a non-statistically significant linear tendency with 5-years mortality risk. For the 15-years mortality, the linear trend across severity stages is more evident for GOLD classifications, with significant increments in the hazard ratio. Stratification by FEV1/Ht3 could better discriminate the functional status of participants. Conclusion The severity of bronchial obstruction according to GOLD classes may stratify mortality risk better than quartiles of FEV1/Ht3, whereas the second seems to be more suited to stratify the risk of clinical outcomes. Concerns about the use of externally developed reference values to calculate FEV1PP do not seem confirmed, at least for GOLD classification.

10.1016/j.arbres.2018.01.022http://hdl.handle.net/10447/339509