Which spirometric indices best predict subsequent death from chronic obstructive pulmonary disease?
- 1 September 2000
- Vol. 55 (9) , 785-788
- https://doi.org/10.1136/thorax.55.9.785
Abstract
BACKGROUND Previous epidemiological studies have related mortality from chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) to forced expiratory volumes (FEV1or FEV0.75) and it is unknown whether other spirometric indices might have greater predictive power. METHODS A case-control study of fatal COPD was conducted within a cohort of London civil servants who performed forced expiratory spirograms in 1967–9 and were followed up for mortality over 20 years. The spirograms of 143 men who died of COPD (ICD8 491, 492 or 519.8) were compared with those of 143 controls individually matched for age, height, and smoking habit who survived longer than their matched case. Flow rates in different parts of the spirogram were compared within case-control pairs and analysed as predictors of fatal COPD by conditional logistic regression. RESULTS Within pair case:control ratios of FEV1, mid expiratory flow rates (e.g. FEF50–75) and FEF75–85 were highly intercorrelated (r>0.7) but correlations with FEF85–95 were weaker (r1/FVC ratio were stronger predictors of death from COPD within the first 10 years than of later deaths (15–19 years). After adjustment for FEV1, mid expiratory flow rates independently predicted fatal COPD but end expiratory flow rates did not. The FEV1 adjusted mortality ratios associated with a 10% decrement in each index were 2.24 (95% CI 1.54 to 3.76) for FEF50–75, 1.20 (95% CI 1.00 to 1.42) for FEF75–85, and 1.10 (95% CI 0.96 to 1.26) for FEF85–95. CONCLUSION This study confirms FEV1 and mid expiratory flow rates as powerful predictors of mortality from COPD, and suggests that measurement of end expiratory flow rates would add little extra predictive information.Keywords
This publication has 14 references indexed in Scilit:
- Small airways: a time to revisit?Thorax, 1998
- Ventilatory function, height, and mortality among lifelong non-smokers.Journal of Epidemiology and Community Health, 1992
- Ventilatory function as a predictor of fatal stroke.BMJ, 1991
- Relation of ventilatory impairment and of chronic mucus hypersecretion to mortality from obstructive lung disease and from all causes.Thorax, 1990
- Predicting 15 year chronic bronchitis mortality in the Whitehall Study.Journal of Epidemiology and Community Health, 1989
- Respiratory symptoms and pulmonary function as predictors of 10-year mortality from respiratory disease, cardiovascular disease, and all causes in the whitehall studyJournal of Clinical Epidemiology, 1988
- Observations on the pathogenesis of chronic airflow obstruction in smokers: implications for the detection of "early" lung disease.Thorax, 1986
- Are Small Airways Tests Helpful in the Detection of Early Airflow Obstruction?Chest, 1978
- CARDIORESPIRATORY DISEASE AND DIABETES AMONG MIDDLE-AGED MALE CIVIL SERVANTS: A study of Screening and InterventionThe Lancet, 1974
- Obstruction in small airways—A challenge to medicineThe American Journal of Medicine, 1972