Gender and Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease
Top Cited Papers
- 15 December 2007
- journal article
- Published by American Thoracic Society in American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine
- Vol. 176 (12) , 1179-1184
- https://doi.org/10.1164/rccm.200704-553cc
Abstract
The prevalence of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) in women is increasing, as is hospitalization for COPD. The number of women dying of COPD in the United States now surpasses men. Despite this, research suggests that physicians are still more likely to correctly diagnose men with COPD than women. Increased tobacco use in women likely explains some of the increase in the prevalence of COPD in women, but data suggest that women may actually be at greater risk of smoking-induced lung function impairment, more severe dyspnea, and poorer health status for the same level of tobacco exposure. The degree to which these observations represent biologic, physiologic, or sociologic differences is not known. Nonsmokers with COPD are also more likely to be female. In addition, new evidence is emerging that men and women may be phenotypically different in their response to tobacco smoke, with men being more prone to an emphysematous phenotype and women an airway predominant phenotype. Inasmuch as COPD is a disease of inflammation, it is also possible that sexual dimorphism of the human immune response may also be responsible for gender differences in the disease. More data are still needed on what the implications of these findings are on therapy. In this clinical commentary, we present current knowledge regarding how gender influences the epidemiology, diagnosis, and presentation of COPD in addition to physiologic and psychologic impairments and we attempt to offer insight into why these differences might exist and how this may influence therapeutic management.Keywords
This publication has 52 references indexed in Scilit:
- The Immunopathogenesis of Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease: Insights from Recent ResearchProceedings of the American Thoracic Society, 2007
- Sex Differences in Severe Pulmonary EmphysemaAmerican Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine, 2007
- Is Alveolar Destruction and Emphysema in Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease an Immune Disease?Proceedings of the American Thoracic Society, 2006
- Bronchodilator response in the lung health study over 11 yrsEuropean Respiratory Journal, 2005
- Effect of inhaled fluticasone propionate on airway responsiveness in treatment-naive individuals--a lesser benefit in femalesEuropean Respiratory Journal, 2000
- Gender differences in airway behaviour over the human life spanThorax, 1999
- Gender differences in health: Are things really as simple as they seem?Social Science & Medicine, 1996
- The Course and Prognosis of Different Forms of Chronic Airways Obstruction in a Sample from the General PopulationNew England Journal of Medicine, 1987
- Case 45-1987New England Journal of Medicine, 1987
- Mortality in relation to smoking: 22 years' observations on female British doctors.BMJ, 1980