New high-risk groups of patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease according to GOLD 2017 were found to have more characteristics related to acute exacerbation and mortality risks.
The Global Initiative for Chronic Obstructive Lung Disease (GOLD) stratification 2017 initiated changes in chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) comprehensive assessments distributions to lower-risk groups in China. The new high-risk groups were found to have more characteristics related to acute exacerbation and mortality risks, according to a new study.
In the study published in International Journal of Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease, researchers investigated COPD patients from 11 medical centers among 7 provinces in China. The included patients did not demonstrate acute exacerbations and upper respiratory tract infection in the 2 months before the study. Each patient completed a self-administered questionnaire, including the modified Medical Research Council (mMRC) that collected the patients’ demographics and medical history.
The results were categorized with a score in the low-symptom section (A and C) or the high-symptom categories (B and D). The groups based on the GOLD 2011 were considered the old groups and those based on the GOLD 2017 were considered new.
“GOLD 2017 revises the classification system and removes spirometry measure in the categorization, leaving the categorization based on symptoms and frequency of exacerbations. Because of the change of criterion of the assessment tool, patients from high-risk groups (groups C and D) without COPD exacerbation history in the previous year will be shifted to the low-risk groups (groups A and B),” the authors wrote. “We sought to investigate how the changes of definition lead to changes of patient demography and clinical characteristics across categories.”
A total of 1532 patients were included and analyzed in the study. The distribution from A to D was 330 (21.5%), 132 (8.6%), 411 (26.8%), 659 (43.0%), according to GOLD 2011, and 557 (36.4%), 405 (26.4%), 184 (12.0%), 386 (25.2%), according to GOLD 2017. Additionally, 46.7% (500/1070) patients were regrouped from high-risk to low-risk groups.
The new groups A and B had a higher proportion of males, lower body mass index, higher mMRC grade, poor pulmonary function, more patients with chronic bronchitis, and fewer patients with coronary heart disease and hypertension disease than the old groups A and B. The new groups C and D patients were older, had fewer men, better pulmonary functions, frequent acute exacerbations in the previous year, and more patients with chronic bronchitis, coronary heart disease, or diabetes than the old groups. Also, compared to the old group D, the new group had more stroke patients.
Overall, the new high-risk groups had more clinical characteristics associated with a greater risk of acute exacerbations and mortality, while some changes in demography and clinical characteristics of the new low-risk group had this association.
“Clinicians should revisit patient’s current treatment for those patients who are reclassified into low-risk groups. Further research should examine whether treatment de-escalation is appropriate,” concluded the authors.
Interstitial Lung Abnormalities in Patients With COPD Linked to Cancer, Heart Failure Risks
October 23rd 2024Interstitial lung abnormalities (ILAs) in patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) are linked to lower lung adenocarcinoma rates but higher rates of other cancers and heart failure.
Read More
Insurance Insights: Dr Jason Shafrin Estimates DMD Insurance Value
July 18th 2024On this episode of Managed Care Cast, we're talking with the author of a study published in the July 2024 issue of The American Journal of Managed Care® that estimates the insurance value of novel Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD) treatment.
Listen
FIT Completion, Yield Rates in CRC Screening Similar After New Screening Guidelines
October 22nd 2024Patients were found to have similar completion and yield rates for the fecal immunochemical test (FIT) at both 45 years and 50 years, making screening for colorectal cancer (CRC) effective in younger patients.
Read More
From Polypharmacy to Personalized Care: Dr Nihar Desai Discusses Holistic Cardiovascular Care
May 30th 2024In this episode of Managed Care Cast, Nihar Desai, MD, MPH, cardiologist and vice chief of Cardiology at the Yale School of Medicine, discusses therapies for cardiovascular conditions as they relate to patient adherence, polypharmacy, and health access.
Listen
The Latest in New and Emerging Therapies in Schizophrenia: Dr Megan Ehret
October 22nd 2024In addition to Cobenfy being approved for schizophrenia, there are other drugs with novel mechanisms being studied that may mean combination therapies or, at least, more options for patients in the future.
Read More
Delayed Diagnoses, Oxygen Therapy Use Linked to Worse Outcomes in Patients With Fibrotic ILD
October 21st 2024Posters presented at the CHEST 2024 annual meeting revealed that delays in diagnosing fibrotic interstitial lung disease (ILD) can negatively impact overall survival, while supplemental oxygen therapy may exacerbate clinical burdens through increased rates of acute exacerbations and hospitalizations.
Read More