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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Identification and prospective validation of clinically relevant chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) subtypes

TLDR
In patients with COPD recruited at their first hospitalisation, three different COPD subtypes were identified and prospectively validated: ‘severe respiratory COPD’, ‘moderate respiratory COPd’ and ‘systemic COPD'.
Abstract
Background Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) is increasingly considered a heterogeneous condition. It was hypothesised that COPD, as currently defined, includes different clinically relevant subtypes. Methods To identify and validate COPD subtypes, 342 subjects hospitalised for the first time because of a COPD exacerbation were recruited. Three months after discharge, when clinically stable, symptoms and quality of life, lung function, exercise capacity, nutritional status, biomarkers of systemic and bronchial inflammation, sputum microbiology, CT of the thorax and echocardiography were assessed. COPD groups were identified by partitioning cluster analysis and validated prospectively against cause-specific hospitalisations and all-cause mortality during a 4 year follow-up. Results Three COPD groups were identified: group 1 (n¼126, 67 years) was characterised by severe airflow limitation (postbronchodilator forced expiratory volume in 1 s (FEV1) 38% predicted) and worse performance in most of the respiratory domains of the disease; group 2 (n¼125, 69 years) showed milder airflow limitation (FEV1 63% predicted); and group 3 (n¼91, 67 years) combined a similarly milder airflow limitation (FEV1 58% predicted) with a high proportion of obesity, cardiovascular disorders, diabetes and systemic inflammation. During follow-up, group 1 had more frequent hospitalisations due to COPD (HR 3.28, p<0.001) and higher all-cause mortality (HR 2.36, p¼0.018) than the other two groups, whereas group 3 had more admissions due to cardiovascular disease (HR 2.87, p¼0.014). Conclusions In patients with COPD recruited at their first hospitalisation, three different COPD subtypes were identified and prospectively validated: ‘severe respiratory COPD’, ‘moderate respiratory COPD’, and ‘systemic COPD’.

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Journal ArticleDOI

The impact of a history of asthma on long-term outcomes of people with newly diagnosed chronic obstructive pulmonary disease: A population study.

TL;DR: Middle‐aged individuals with physician‐diagnosed COPD and a history of asthma had a higher hazard of hospitalizations due to COPd and other respiratory diseases than did those without and were not likely a result of unmeasured confounding or misclassification.
Dissertation

A Systems Medicine approach to multimorbidity. Towards personalised care for patients with Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease

Ákos Tényi
TL;DR: The thesis investigates molecular disturbances at the body system level and identifies signature biological pathways that potentially play key role in systemic effects and comorbidities of patient with COPD and identifies personalized health risk prediction and service selection as potential tools for the integration and transfer of scientific evidence on multimorbidity to daily clinical practice.
Journal ArticleDOI

Coming off the GOLD standard.

TL;DR: Many methodological limitations are observed in COPD phenotyping studies, and derivation of phenotypes would be best done with prospective data, enabling the assessment of temporal variability and stability of the features.

Особливості імуногістохімічної діагностики нейроендокринних пухлин

TL;DR: The possibility of neuroendocrine tumor (NET) development from almost almost unknown organ causes problems in determination of a true primary site after lymph nodes, so as to not compromise the accuracy of detection of such metastases.
Dissertation

A doença pulmonar obstrutiva crónica e o exercício: impacto da doença no declínio funcional e importância do treino de exercício nos benefícios para a saúde

TL;DR: In this article, Estrutura da Tese et al. present a model of the Estrategies of Estrumento da TESE.xvii.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Inference and missing data

Donald B. Rubin
- 01 Dec 1976 - 
TL;DR: In this article, it was shown that ignoring the process that causes missing data when making sampling distribution inferences about the parameter of the data, θ, is generally appropriate if and only if the missing data are missing at random and the observed data are observed at random, and then such inferences are generally conditional on the observed pattern of missing data.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Body-Mass Index, Airflow Obstruction, Dyspnea, and Exercise Capacity Index in Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease

TL;DR: The BODE index, a simple multidimensional grading system, is better than the FEV1 at predicting the risk of death from any cause and from respiratory causes among patients with COPD.
Book

Users' Guides to the Medical Literature

TL;DR: Without a way of critically appraising the information they receive, clinicians are relatively helpless in deciding what new information to learn and decide how to modify their practice.
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