1,355 results on '"DRANSFIELD, MARK T."'
Search Results
2. Low dose cadmium exposure regulates miR-381–ANO1 interaction in airway epithelial cells
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Singh, Pooja, Li, Fu Jun, Dsouza, Kevin, Stephens, Crystal T, Zheng, Huaxiu, Kumar, Abhishek, Dransfield, Mark T., and Antony, Veena B
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- 2024
- Full Text
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3. Bronchodilator Responsiveness in Tobacco-Exposed People With or Without COPD
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Fortis, Spyridon, Quibrera, Pedro M, Comellas, Alejandro P, Bhatt, Surya P, Tashkin, Donald P, Hoffman, Eric A, Criner, Gerard J, Han, MeiLan K, Barr, R Graham, Arjomandi, Mehrdad, Dransfield, Mark B, Peters, Stephen P, Dolezal, Brett A, Kim, Victor, Putcha, Nirupama, Rennard, Stephen I, Paine, Robert, Kanner, Richard E, Curtis, Jeffrey L, Bowler, Russell P, Martinez, Fernando J, Hansel, Nadia N, Krishnan, Jerry A, Woodruff, Prescott G, Barjaktarevic, Igor Z, Couper, David, Anderson, Wayne H, Cooper, Christopher B, Investigators, Subpopulations and Intermediate Outcome Measures in COPD Study, Alexis, Neil E, Barjaktarevic, Igor, Basta, Patricia, Bateman, Lori A, Bleecker, Eugene R, Boucher, Richard C, Christenson, Stephanie A, Couper, David J, Crystal, Ronald G, Doerschuk, Claire M, Dransfield, Mark T, Drummond, Brad, Freeman, Christine M, Galban, Craig, Hastie, Annette T, Huang, Yvonne, Kaner, Robert J, Kleerup, Eric C, LaVange, Lisa M, Lazarus, Stephen C, Meyers, Deborah A, Moore, Wendy C, Newell, John D, Paulin, Laura, Pirozzi, Cheryl, Oelsner, Elizabeth C, O’Neal, Wanda K, Ortega, Victor E, Raman, Sanjeev, Wells, J Michael, and Wise, Robert A
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Cardiovascular Medicine and Haematology ,Clinical Sciences ,Asthma ,Lung ,Clinical Research ,Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease ,Respiratory ,Good Health and Well Being ,Humans ,Bronchodilator Agents ,Retrospective Studies ,Forced Expiratory Volume ,Pulmonary Disease ,Chronic Obstructive ,Vital Capacity ,Tobacco Products ,bronchodilator ,bronchodilator response ,bronchodilator responsiveness ,bronchodilator reversibility ,COPD ,Subpopulations and Intermediate Outcome Measures in COPD Study Investigators ,Respiratory System ,Cardiovascular medicine and haematology ,Clinical sciences - Abstract
BackgroundBronchodilator responsiveness (BDR) in obstructive lung disease varies over time and may be associated with distinct clinical features.Research questionIs consistent BDR over time (always present) differentially associated with obstructive lung disease features relative to inconsistent (sometimes present) or never (never present) BDR in tobacco-exposed people with or without COPD?Study design and methodsWe retrospectively analyzed data from 2,269 tobacco-exposed participants in the Subpopulations and Intermediate Outcome Measures in COPD Study with or without COPD. We used various BDR definitions: change of ≥ 200 mL and ≥ 12% in FEV1 (FEV1-BDR), change in FVC (FVC-BDR), and change in in FEV1, FVC or both (ATS-BDR). Using generalized linear models adjusted for demographics, smoking history, FEV1 % predicted after bronchodilator administration, and number of visits that the participant completed, we assessed the association of BDR group: (1) consistent BDR, (2) inconsistent BDR, and (3) never BDR with asthma, CT scan features, blood eosinophil levels, and FEV1 decline in participants without COPD (Global Initiative for Chronic Obstructive Lung Disease [GOLD] stage 0) and the entire cohort (participants with or without COPD).ResultsBoth consistent and inconsistent ATS-BDR were associated with asthma history and greater small airways disease (%parametric response mapping functional small airways disease) relative to never ATS-BDR in participants with GOLD stage 0 disease and the entire cohort. We observed similar findings using FEV1-BDR and FVC-BDR definitions. Eosinophils did not vary consistently among BDR groups. Consistent BDR was associated with FEV1 decline over time relative to never BDR in the entire cohort. In participants with GOLD stage 0 disease, both the inconsistent ATS-BDR group (OR, 3.20; 95% CI, 2.21-4.66; P < .001) and consistent ATS-BDR group (OR, 9.48; 95% CI, 3.77-29.12; P < .001) were associated with progression to COPD relative to the never ATS-BDR group.InterpretationDemonstration of BDR, even once, describes an obstructive lung disease phenotype with a history of asthma and greater small airways disease. Consistent demonstration of BDR indicated a high risk of lung function decline over time in the entire cohort and was associated with higher risk of progression to COPD in patients with GOLD stage 0 disease.
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- 2023
4. Differential Association of COPD Subtypes With Cardiovascular Events and COPD Exacerbations
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Yang, Han-Mo, Ryu, Min Hyung, Carey, Vincent J., Young, Kendra, Kinney, Gregory L., Dransfield, Mark T., Wade, Raymond C., Wells, James M., Budoff, Matthew J., Castaldi, Peter J., Hersh, Craig P., and Silverman, Edwin K.
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- 2024
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5. Bronchodilators in Tobacco-Exposed Persons with Symptoms and Preserved Lung Function
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Han, MeiLan K, Ye, Wen, Wang, Di, White, Emily, Arjomandi, Mehrdad, Barjaktarevic, Igor Z, Brown, Stacey-Ann, Buhr, Russell G, Comellas, Alejandro P, Cooper, Christopher B, Criner, Gerard J, Dransfield, Mark T, Drescher, Frank, Folz, Rodney J, Hansel, Nadia N, Kalhan, Ravi, Kaner, Robert J, Kanner, Richard E, Krishnan, Jerry A, Lazarus, Stephen C, Maddipati, Veeranna, Martinez, Fernando J, Mathews, Anne, Meldrum, Catherine, McEvoy, Charlene, Nyunoya, Toru, Rogers, Linda, Stringer, William W, Wendt, Christine H, Wise, Robert A, Wisniewski, Stephen R, Sciurba, Frank C, and Woodruff, Prescott G
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Lung ,Tobacco ,Clinical Research ,Clinical Trials and Supportive Activities ,Tobacco Smoke and Health ,6.1 Pharmaceuticals ,Evaluation of treatments and therapeutic interventions ,Respiratory ,Good Health and Well Being ,Adrenergic beta-2 Receptor Agonists ,Anti-Bacterial Agents ,Bronchodilator Agents ,Forced Expiratory Volume ,Glucocorticoids ,Glycopyrrolate ,Humans ,Pulmonary Disease ,Chronic Obstructive ,Treatment Outcome ,RETHINC Study Group ,Medical and Health Sciences ,General & Internal Medicine - Abstract
BackgroundMany persons with a history of smoking tobacco have clinically significant respiratory symptoms despite an absence of airflow obstruction as assessed by spirometry. They are often treated with medications for chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), but supporting evidence for this treatment is lacking.MethodsWe randomly assigned persons who had a tobacco-smoking history of at least 10 pack-years, respiratory symptoms as defined by a COPD Assessment Test score of at least 10 (scores range from 0 to 40, with higher scores indicating worse symptoms), and preserved lung function on spirometry (ratio of forced expiratory volume in 1 second [FEV1] to forced vital capacity [FVC] ≥0.70 and FVC ≥70% of the predicted value after bronchodilator use) to receive either indacaterol (27.5 μg) plus glycopyrrolate (15.6 μg) or placebo twice daily for 12 weeks. The primary outcome was at least a 4-point decrease (i.e., improvement) in the St. George's Respiratory Questionnaire (SGRQ) score (scores range from 0 to 100, with higher scores indicating worse health status) after 12 weeks without treatment failure (defined as an increase in lower respiratory symptoms treated with a long-acting inhaled bronchodilator, glucocorticoid, or antibiotic agent).ResultsA total of 535 participants underwent randomization. In the modified intention-to-treat population (471 participants), 128 of 227 participants (56.4%) in the treatment group and 144 of 244 (59.0%) in the placebo group had at least a 4-point decrease in the SGRQ score (difference, -2.6 percentage points; 95% confidence interval [CI], -11.6 to 6.3; adjusted odds ratio, 0.91; 95% CI, 0.60 to 1.37; P = 0.65). The mean change in the percent of predicted FEV1 was 2.48 percentage points (95% CI, 1.49 to 3.47) in the treatment group and -0.09 percentage points (95% CI, -1.06 to 0.89) in the placebo group, and the mean change in the inspiratory capacity was 0.12 liters (95% CI, 0.07 to 0.18) in the treatment group and 0.02 liters (95% CI, -0.03 to 0.08) in the placebo group. Four serious adverse events occurred in the treatment group, and 11 occurred in the placebo group; none were deemed potentially related to the treatment or placebo.ConclusionsInhaled dual bronchodilator therapy did not decrease respiratory symptoms in symptomatic, tobacco-exposed persons with preserved lung function as assessed by spirometry. (Funded by the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute and others; RETHINC ClinicalTrials.gov number, NCT02867761.).
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- 2022
6. Identification of Sputum Biomarkers Predictive of Pulmonary Exacerbations in COPD
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Esther, Charles R, O’Neal, Wanda K, Anderson, Wayne H, Kesimer, Mehmet, Ceppe, Agathe, Doerschuk, Claire M, Alexis, Neil E, Hastie, Annette T, Barr, R Graham, Bowler, Russell P, Wells, J Michael, Oelsner, Elizabeth C, Comellas, Alejandro P, Tesfaigzi, Yohannes, Kim, Victor, Paulin, Laura M, Cooper, Christopher B, Han, MeiLan K, Huang, Yvonne J, Labaki, Wassim W, Curtis, Jeffrey L, Boucher, Richard C, Study, Subpopulations and Intermediate Outcome Measures in COPD, Arjomandi, Mehrdad, Barjaktarevic, Igor, Bateman, Lori A, Bhatt, Surya P, Bleecker, Eugene R, Christenson, Stephanie A, Couper, David J, Criner, Gerard J, Crystal, Ronald G, Dransfield, Mark T, Drummond, Brad, Freeman, Christine M, Galban, Craig, Hansel, Nadia N, Hoffman, Eric A, Huang, Yvonne, Kaner, Robert J, Kanner, Richard E, Kleerup, Eric C, Krishnan, Jerry A, LaVange, Lisa M, Lazarus, Stephen C, Martinez, Fernando J, Meyers, Deborah A, Moore, Wendy C, Newell, John D, Paine, Robert, Paulin, Laura, Peters, Stephen P, Pirozzi, Cheryl, Putcha, Nirupama, Ortega, Victor E, Raman, Sanjeev, Rennard, Stephen I, Tashkin, Donald P, Wise, Robert A, and Woodruff, Prescott G
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Lung ,Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease ,Clinical Research ,Respiratory ,Good Health and Well Being ,Biomarkers ,Humans ,Hypoxanthines ,N-Acetylneuraminic Acid ,Pulmonary Disease ,Chronic Obstructive ,Sputum ,adenosine ,glutathione ,inflammation ,metabolomics ,methionine salvage ,mucus ,Subpopulations and Intermediate Outcome Measures in COPD Study ,Clinical Sciences ,Respiratory System - Abstract
BackgroundImproved understanding of the pathways associated with airway pathophysiologic features in COPD will identify new predictive biomarkers and novel therapeutic targets.Research questionWhich physiologic pathways are altered in the airways of patients with COPD and will predict exacerbations?Study design and methodsWe applied a mass spectrometric panel of metabolomic biomarkers related to mucus hydration and inflammation to sputa from the multicenter Subpopulations and Intermediate Outcome Measures in COPD Study. Biomarkers elevated in sputa from patients with COPD were evaluated for relationships to measures of COPD disease severity and their ability to predict future exacerbations.ResultsSputum supernatants from 980 patients were analyzed: 77 healthy nonsmokers, 341 smokers with preserved spirometry, and 562 patients with COPD (178 with Global Initiative on Chronic Obstructive Lung Disease [GOLD] stage 1 disease, 303 with GOLD stage 2 disease, and 81 with GOLD stage 3 disease) were analyzed. Biomarkers from multiple pathways were elevated in COPD and correlated with sputum neutrophil counts. Among the most significant analytes (false discovery rate, 0.1) were sialic acid, hypoxanthine, xanthine, methylthioadenosine, adenine, and glutathione. Sialic acid and hypoxanthine were associated strongly with measures of disease severity, and elevation of these biomarkers was associated with shorter time to exacerbation and improved prediction models of future exacerbations.InterpretationBiomarker evaluation implicated pathways involved in mucus hydration, adenosine metabolism, methionine salvage, and oxidative stress in COPD airway pathophysiologic characteristics. Therapies that target these pathways may be of benefit in COPD, and a simple model adding sputum-soluble phase biomarkers improves prediction of pulmonary exacerbations.Trial registryClinicalTrials.gov; No.: NCT01969344; URL: www.Clinicaltrialsgov.
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- 2022
7. Heart Rate Variability on 10-Second Electrocardiogram and Risk of Acute Exacerbation of COPD: A Secondary Analysis of the BLOCK COPD Trial.
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MacDonald, David M, Mkorombindo, Takudzwa, Ling, Sharon X, Adabag, Selcuk, Casaburi, Richard, Connett, John E, Helgeson, Erika S, Porszasz, Janos, Rossiter, Harry B, Stringer, William W, Voelker, Helen, Zhao, Dongxing, Dransfield, Mark T, and Kunisaki, Ken M
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Epidemiology ,Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Health Sciences ,Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease ,Prevention ,Lung ,Clinical Trials and Supportive Activities ,Clinical Research ,Respiratory ,acute exacerbation of COPD ,heart rate variability ,BLOCK-COPD ,electrocardiogram ,autonomic nervous system - Abstract
IntroductionAutonomic dysfunction is common in chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), and worse autonomic function may be a marker of risk for acute exacerbations of COPD (AECOPD). Heart rate variability (HRV) is a measure of autonomic function. Our objective was to test whether lower (worse) HRV is a risk factor for AECOPD.MethodsWe measured standard deviation of normal RR intervals (SDNN) and root mean square of successive RR interval differences (RMSSD) on 10-second electrocardiograms (ECGs) performed at screening and day 42 in participants in the Beta Blockers for the Prevention of Acute Exacerbations of COPD trial ( BLOCK-COPD), a placebo-controlled trial of metoprolol for prevention of AECOPD. We used Cox-proportional hazards models to test if these HRV measures were associated with risk of any AECOPD, and separately, hospitalized AECOPD. We tested associations using baseline HRV measures and incorporating HRV measures from day 42 as a time-varying covariate. We also tested for interactions with metoprolol assignment.ResultsOf 532 trial participants, 529 (forced expiratory volume in 1 second [FEV1 ]41 ± 16.3 % predicted) were included in this analysis. We did not find a significant association between HRV measures and risk of AECOPD when all participants were analyzed together. There was a significant interaction between RMSSD and assignment to metoprolol on time to first hospitalized AECOPD; in the placebo group greater RMSSD was associated with a lower risk of hospitalized AECOPD (adjusted hazard ratio0.71, 95% confidence interval: 0.52 to 0.96, per 10 ms increase) but there was no association in the metoprolol group.ConclusionsAutonomic dysfunction as measured by HRV may be a risk factor for AECOPD. Future studies should analyze longer HRV recordings and their performance in broader samples of people with COPD, including those on beta-blockers.
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- 2022
8. Characterizing COPD Symptom Variability in the Stable State Utilizing the Evaluating Respiratory Symptoms in COPD Instrument.
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Krishnan, Jamuna K, Ancy, Kayley M, Oromendia, Clara, Hoffman, Katherine L, Easthausen, Imaani, Leidy, Nancy K, Han, MeiLan K, Bowler, Russell P, Christenson, Stephanie A, Couper, David J, Criner, Gerard J, Curtis, Jeffrey L, Dransfield, Mark T, Hansel, Nadia N, Iyer, Anand S, Paine Iii, Robert, Peters, Stephen P, Wedzicha, Jadwiga A, Woodruff, Prescott G, Ballman, Karla V, Martinez, Fernando J, and SPIROMICS Investigators
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SPIROMICS Investigators ,EXACT ,chronic obstructive pulmonary disease ,exacerbations ,patient-reported outcomes ,symptom variation ,Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease ,Lung ,Clinical Research ,Respiratory - Abstract
RationaleIt has been suggested that patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) experience considerable daily respiratory symptom fluctuation. A standardized measure is needed to quantify and understand the implications of day-to-day symptom variability.ObjectivesTo compare standard deviation with other statistical measures of symptom variability and identify characteristics of individuals with higher symptom variability.MethodsIndividuals in the SubPopulations and InteRmediate Outcome Measures In COPD Study (SPIROMICS) Exacerbations sub-study completed an Evaluating Respiratory Symptoms in COPD (E-RS) daily questionnaire. We calculated within-subject standard deviation (WS-SD) for each patient at week 0 and correlated this with measurements obtained 4 weeks later using Pearson's r and Bland Altman plots. Median WS-SD value dichotomized participants into higher versus lower variability groups. Association between WS-SD and exacerbation risk during 4 follow-up weeks was explored.Measurements and main resultsDiary completion rates were sufficient in 140 (68%) of 205 sub-study participants. Reproducibility (r) of the WS-SD metric from baseline to week 4 was 0.32. Higher variability participants had higher St George's Respiratory Questionnaire (SGRQ) scores (47.3 ± 20.3 versus 39.6 ± 21.5, p=.04) than lower variability participants. Exploratory analyses found no relationship between symptom variability and health care resource utilization-defined exacerbations.ConclusionsWS-SD of the E-RS can be used as a measure of symptom variability in studies of patients with COPD. Patients with higher variability have worse health-related quality of life. WS-SD should be further validated as a measure to understand the implications of symptom variability.
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- 2022
9. Chronotropic index during 6-minute walk and acute respiratory events in COPDGene
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Macdonald, David M, Palzer, Elise F, Abbasi, Asghar, Baldomero, Arianne K, Bhatt, Surya P, Casaburi, Richard, Connett, John E, Dransfield, Mark T, Gaeckle, Nathaniel T, Mkorombindo, Takudzwa, Rossiter, Harry B, Stringer, William W, Tiller, Nicholas B, Wendt, Chris H, Zhao, Dongxing, and Kunisaki, Ken M
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Sciences ,Lung ,Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease ,Respiratory ,Good Health and Well Being ,Exercise Test ,Exercise Tolerance ,Humans ,Pulmonary Disease ,Chronic Obstructive ,Spirometry ,Walk Test ,Walking ,Pulmonary disease ,Chronic obstructive ,Cardiac chronotropy ,Disease exacerbation ,Cohort study ,Cardiorespiratory Medicine and Haematology ,Respiratory System ,Cardiovascular medicine and haematology - Abstract
BackgroundLower heart rate (HR) increases during exercise and slower HR recovery (HRR) after exercise are markers of worse autonomic function that may be associated with risk of acute respiratory events (ARE).MethodsData from 6-min walk testing (6MWT) in COPDGene were used to calculate the chronotropic index (CI) [(HR immediately post 6MWT - resting HR)/((220 - age) - resting HR)] and HRR at 1 min after 6MWT completion. We used zero-inflated negative binomial regression to test associations of CI and HRR with rates of any ARE (requiring steroids and/or antibiotics) and severe ARE (requiring emergency department visit or hospitalization), among all participants and in spirometry subgroups (normal, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease [COPD], and preserved ratio with impaired spirometry).ResultsAmong 4,484 participants, mean follow-up time was 4.1 years, and 1,966 had COPD. Among all participants, CI-6MWT was not associated with rate of any ARE [adjusted incidence rate ratio (aIRR) 0.98 (0.95-1.01)], but higher CI-6MWT was associated with lower rate of severe ARE [0.95 (0.92-0.99)]. Higher HRR was associated with a lower rate of both any ARE [0.97 (0.95-0.99)] and severe ARE [0.95 (0.92-0.98)]. Results were similar in the COPD spirometry subgroup.ConclusionHeart rate measures derived from 6MWT tests may have utility in predicting risk of acute respiratory events and COPD exacerbations.
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- 2022
10. Longitudinal Association Between Muscle Loss and Mortality in Ever Smokers
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Mason, Stefanie E, Moreta-Martinez, Rafael, Labaki, Wassim W, Strand, Matthew J, Regan, Elizabeth A, Bon, Jessica, San Jose Estepar, Ruben, Casaburi, Richard, McDonald, Merry-Lynn, Rossiter, Harry B, Make, Barry, Dransfield, Mark T, Han, MeiLan K, Young, Kendra, Curtis, Jeffrey L, Stringer, Kathleen, Kinney, Greg, Hokanson, John E, San Jose Estepar, Raul, Washko, George R, Crapo, James D, Silverman, Edwin K, Cummings, Sara, Madden, Kelley, Make, Barry J, Nabbosa, Juliet, Port, Emily, Rashdi, Serine, Stepp, Lori, Watts, Shandi, Weaver, Michael, Beaty, Terri, Bowler, Russell P, Lynch, David A, Regan, Elizabeth, Anderson, Gary, Bleecker, Eugene R, Coxson, Harvey O, Crystal, Ronald G, Hogg, James C, Province, Michael A, Rennard, Stephen I, Croxton, Thomas, Gan, Weiniu, Postow, Lisa A, Viviano, Lisa M, Costa-Davis, Corinne, Malanga, Elisha, Prieto, Delia, Tal-Singer, Ruth, Farzadegan, Homayoon, Hadji, Akila, Sathe, Leena, Baraghoshi, David, Chen, Grace, Crooks, James, Knowles, Ruthie, Pratte, Katherine, Wilson, Carla, Zelarney, Pearlanne T, Kechris, Katerina J, Leach, Sonia, Hokanson, Co-Chair John E, Austin, Erin E, Czizik, Annika, Kinney, Gregory, Li, Yisha, Lutz, Sharon M, Ragland, Margaret F, Richmond, Nicole, Young, Kendra A, Cho, Michael, Castaldi, Peter J, Glass, Kimberly, Hersh, Craig, Kim, Wonji, Liu, Yang-Yu, Hersh, Craig P, Bidinger, Jacqueline, Cho, Michael H, Conrad, Douglas, and DeMeo, Dawn L
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Research ,Prevention ,Nutrition ,2.1 Biological and endogenous factors ,Good Health and Well Being ,Body Composition ,Body Mass Index ,Humans ,Longitudinal Studies ,Lung ,Pectoralis Muscles ,Pulmonary Disease ,Chronic Obstructive ,Smokers ,COPD ,mortality ,muscle wasting ,sarcopenia ,COPDGene Investigators ,Respiratory System ,Cardiovascular medicine and haematology ,Clinical sciences - Abstract
BackgroundBody composition measures, specifically low weight or reduced muscle mass, are associated with mortality in COPD, but the effect of longitudinal body composition changes is undefined.Research questionIs the longitudinal loss of fat-free mass (FFM) associated with increased mortality, including in those with initially normal or elevated body composition metrics?Study design and methodsParticipants with complete data for at least one visit in the COPDGene study (n = 9,268) and the ECLIPSE study (n = 1,760) were included and monitored for 12 and 8 years, respectively. Pectoralis muscle area (PMA) was derived from thoracic CT scans and used as a proxy for FFM. A longitudinal mixed submodel for PMA and a Cox proportional hazards submodel for survival were fitted on a joint distribution, using a shared random intercept parameter and Markov chain Monte Carlo parameter estimation.ResultsBoth cohorts demonstrated a left-shifted distribution of baseline FFM, not reflected in BMI, and an increase in all-cause mortality risk associated with longitudinal loss of PMA. For each 1-cm2 PMA loss, mortality increased 3.1% (95% CI, 2.4%-3.7%; P < .001) in COPDGene, and 2.4% (95% CI, 0.9%-4.0%; P < .001) in ECLIPSE. Increased mortality risk was independent of enrollment values for BMI and disease severity [BODE (body mass, airflow obstruction, dyspnea, and exercise capacity) index quartiles] and was significant even in participants with initially greater than average PMA.InterpretationLongitudinal loss of PMA is associated with increased all-cause mortality, regardless of BMI or initial muscle mass. Consideration of novel screening tests and further research into mechanisms contributing to muscle decline may improve risk stratification and identify novel therapeutic targets in ever smokers.
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- 2022
11. Comparative Impact of Depressive Symptoms and FEV1% on Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease.
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O’Toole, Jacqueline, Woo, Han, Putcha, Nirupama, Cooper, Christopher B, Woodruff, Prescott, Kanner, Richard E, Paine, Robert, Bowler, Russell P, Comellas, Alejandro, Hoth, Karin F, Krishnan, Jerry A, Han, Meilan, Dransfield, Mark, Iyer, Anand S, Couper, David, Peters, Stephen P, Criner, Gerard, Kim, Victor, Barr, R Graham, Martinez, Fernando J, Hansel, Nadia N, Eakin, Michelle N, Alexis, Neil E, Anderson, Wayne H, Arjomandi, Mehrdad, Barjaktarevic, Igor, Bateman, Lori A, Bhatt, Surya P, Bleecker, Eugene R, Boucher, Richard C, Christenson, Stephanie A, Comellas, Alejandro P, Couper, David J, Criner, Gerard J, Crystal, Ronald G, Curtis, Jeffrey L, Doerschuk, Claire M, Dransfield, Mark T, Drummond, Brad, Freeman, Christine M, Galban, Craig, Han, MeiLan K, Hastie, Annette T, Hoffman, Eric A, Huang, Yvonne, Kaner, Robert J, Kleerup, Eric C, LaVange, Lisa M, Lazarus, Stephen C, Meyers, Deborah A, Moore, Wendy C, Newell, John D, Paulin, Laura, Pirozzi, Cheryl, Oelsner, Elizabeth C, O’Neal, Wanda K, Ortega, Victor E, Raman, Sanjeev, Rennard, Stephen I, Tashkin, Donald P, Wells, J Michael, Wise, Robert A, and Woodruff, Prescott G
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Clinical Research ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Depression ,Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease ,Mental Health ,Lung ,Respiratory ,Good Health and Well Being ,Female ,Forced Expiratory Volume ,Humans ,Pulmonary Disease ,Chronic Obstructive ,Quality of Life ,Respiratory Function Tests ,Smoking ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,depression ,COPD ,patient reported outcome measures ,SPIROMICS Investigators - Abstract
Rationale: Individuals with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) have a high prevalence of depression, which is associated with increased COPD hospitalizations and readmissions. Objectives: Examine the impact of depressive symptoms compared with FEV1% on COPD morbidity. Methods: Using longitudinal data from individuals with COPD in the Subpopulations and Intermediate Outcome Measures in COPD Study, longitudinal growth analysis was performed to assess COPD morbidity by assessing differences in baseline 6-minute walk distance and patient reported outcomes (PROs) and their rate of change over time explained by depressive symptoms or lung function, as measured by Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale or FEV1% respectively. PROs consisted of in-person completion of St. George's Respiratory Questionnaire, COPD Assessment Test, Functional Assessment of Chronic Illness Therapy Fatigue, and Modified Medical Research Council Dyspnea Scale measures. Results: Of the individuals analyzed (n = 1,830), 43% were female, 81% Caucasian with mean ± SD age of 65.1 ± 8.1, and 52.7 ± 27.5 pack-years smoking. Mean ± SD FEV1% was 60.9 ± 23.0% and 20% had clinically significant depressive symptoms. Adjusted models showed higher Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale scores and lower FEV1% each were associated with worse PROs at baseline (P ⩽ 0.001). Depression accounted for more baseline variance in St. George's Respiratory Questionnaire, COPD Assessment Test, and Functional Assessment of Chronic Illness Therapy Fatigue than FEV1%, explaining 30-67% of heterogeneity. FEV1% accounted for more baseline variance in Modified Medical Research Council Dyspnea Scale and 6-minute walk distance than depression, explaining 16-32% of heterogeneity. Depressive symptoms accounted for 3-17% variance in change over time in PROs. In contrast, FEV1% accounted for 1-4% variance over time in PROs. Conclusions: Depression is more strongly associated with many PROs at baseline and their change over time compared with FEV1%. Recognizing and incorporating the impact of depressive symptoms into individualized care may improve COPD outcomes.
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- 2022
12. Project EPIC (Empowering People to Independence in COPD): Study protocol for a hybrid effectiveness-implementation pilot randomized controlled trial of telephonic, geriatrics-palliative care nurse-coaching in older adults with COPD and their family caregivers
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Byun, Jun Y., Wells, Rachel, Bechthold, Avery C., Coffee-Dunning, Jazmine, Armstrong, Margaret, Taylor, Richard, O'Hare, Lanier, Dransfield, Mark T., Brown, Cynthia J., Vance, David E., Odom, J. Nicholas, Bakitas, Marie, and Iyer, Anand S.
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- 2024
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13. Using Community Health Advisors to Increase Lung Cancer Screening Awareness in the Black Belt: a Pilot Study
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Niranjan, Soumya J., Opoku-Agyeman, William, Hardy, Claudia M., Bowman, Tara, Vedre-Kyanam, Agasthya, Hearld, Kristine Ria, Dransfield, Mark T., and Baskin, Monica L.
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- 2023
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14. Association between P-pulmonale and respiratory morbidity in COPD: a secondary analysis of the BLOCK-COPD trial
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Wade, R. Chad, Mkorombindo, Takudzwa, Ling, Sharon X., Helgeson, Erika. S., MacDonald, David M., Pew, Krystle, Voelker, Helen, Bittner, Vera, Kunisaki, Ken M., Lammi, Matthew R., and Dransfield, Mark. T.
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- 2023
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15. Chronotropic Index and Acute Exacerbations of Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease: A Secondary Analysis of BLOCK COPD.
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MacDonald, David M, Helgeson, Erika S, Adabag, Selcuk, Casaburi, Richard, Connett, John E, Stringer, William W, Voelker, Helen, Dransfield, Mark T, and Kunisaki, Ken M
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Humans ,Pulmonary Disease ,Chronic Obstructive ,Disease Progression ,Respiratory Function Tests ,Forced Expiratory Volume ,Hospitalization ,cardiac chronotropy ,chronic obstructive ,disease exacerbation ,pulmonary disease ,Prevention ,Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease ,Lung ,Respiratory - Abstract
Rationale: The chronotropic index quantifies the proportion of the expected heart rate increase that is attained during exercise. The relationship between the chronotropic index and acute exacerbations of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (AECOPDs) has not been evaluated. Objectives: To determine whether a higher chronotropic index during a 6-minute walk (CI-6MW) is associated with lower risk of AECOPD and whether the CI-6MW is a marker of susceptibility to adverse effects of metoprolol in chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD). Methods: We analyzed data from the BLOCK COPD (Beta-Blockers for the Prevention of AECOPDs) trial. We used Cox proportional hazards models to investigate the relationship between the CI-6MW and the time to AECOPDs. We also tested for interactions between study group assignment (metoprolol vs. placebo) and the CI-6MW on the time to AECOPDs. Results: Four hundred seventy-seven participants with exacerbation-prone COPD (mean forced expiratory volume in 1 second, 41% of predicted) were included in this analysis. A higher CI-6MW was independently associated with a decreased risk of AECOPDs of any severity (adjusted hazard ratio per 0.1 increase in CI-6MW of 0.88; 95% confidence interval, 0.80-0.96) but was not independently associated with AECOPDs requiring hospitalization (adjusted hazard ratio, 0.94; 95% confidence interval, 0.81-1.05). There was a significant interaction by treatment assignment, and in a stratified analysis, the protective effects of a higher CI-6MW on AECOPDs were negated by metoprolol use. Conclusions: A higher CI-6MW is associated with a decreased risk of AECOPDs and may be an indicator of susceptibility to the adverse effects of metoprolol.
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- 2021
16. Respiratory exacerbations are associated with muscle loss in current and former smokers
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Mason, Stefanie Elizabeth, Moreta-Martinez, Rafael, Labaki, Wassim W, Strand, Matthew, Baraghoshi, David, Regan, Elizabeth A, Bon, Jessica, San Jose Estepar, Ruben, Casaburi, Richard, McDonald, Merry-Lynn N, Rossiter, Harry, Make, Barry J, Dransfield, Mark T, Han, MeiLan K, Young, Kendra A, Kinney, Greg, Hokanson, John E, San Jose Estepar, Raul, and Washko, George R
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Cardiovascular Medicine and Haematology ,Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Research ,Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease ,Lung ,6.1 Pharmaceuticals ,Respiratory ,Aged ,Disease Progression ,Female ,Forced Expiratory Volume ,Humans ,Male ,Middle Aged ,Muscular Atrophy ,Population Surveillance ,Prognosis ,Prospective Studies ,Pulmonary Disease ,Chronic Obstructive ,Quality of Life ,Severity of Illness Index ,Smoking ,Tomography ,X-Ray Computed ,COPD exacerbations ,imaging ,CT MRI etc ,pulmonary rehabilitation ,COPDGene Investigators ,COPDGene® Investigators ,imaging/CT MRI etc ,Respiratory System ,Cardiovascular medicine and haematology ,Clinical sciences - Abstract
ObjectivesMuscle wasting is a recognised extra-pulmonary complication in chronic obstructive pulmonary disease and has been associated with increased risk of death. Acute respiratory exacerbations are associated with reduction of muscle function, but there is a paucity of data on their long-term effect. This study explores the relationship between acute respiratory exacerbations and long-term muscle loss using serial measurements of CT derived pectoralis muscle area (PMA).Design and settingParticipants were included from two prospective, longitudinal, observational, multicentre cohorts of ever-smokers with at least 10 pack-year history.ParticipantsThe primary analysis included 1332 (of 2501) participants from Evaluation of COPD Longitudinally to Identify Predictive Surrogate Endpoints (ECLIPSE) and 4384 (of 10 198) participants from Genetic Epidemiology of COPD (COPDGene) who had complete data from their baseline and follow-up visits.InterventionsPMA was measured on chest CT scans at two timepoints. Self-reported exacerbation data were collected from participants in both studies through the use of periodic longitudinal surveys.Main outcome measuresAge-related and excess muscle loss over time.ResultsAge, sex, race and body mass index were associated with baseline PMA. Participants experienced age-related decline at the upper end of reported normal ranges. In ECLIPSE, the exacerbation rate over time was associated with an excess muscle area loss of 1.3% (95% CI 0.6 to 1.9, p
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- 2021
17. Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease and cardiovascular disease: mechanistic links and implications for practice
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Maeda, Tetsuro and Dransfield, Mark T.
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- 2024
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18. COPD and multimorbidity: recognising and addressing a syndemic occurrence
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Fabbri, Leonardo M, Celli, Bartolome R, Agustí, Alvar, Criner, Gerard J, Dransfield, Mark T, Divo, Miguel, Krishnan, Jamuna K, Lahousse, Lies, Montes de Oca, Maria, Salvi, Sundeep S, Stolz, Daiana, Vanfleteren, Lowie E G W, and Vogelmeier, Claus F
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- 2023
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19. The presence of emphysema on chest imaging and mid-life cognition.
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Henkle, Benjamin E, Colangelo, Laura A, Dransfield, Mark T, Hou, Lifang, Jacobs, David R, Joyce, Brian T, Pistenmaa, Carrie L, Putman, Rachel K, Sidney, Steve, Thyagarajan, Bharat, Washko, George R, Yaffe, Kristine, Kalhan, Ravi, and Kunisaki, Ken M
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BackgroundAirflow obstruction is associated with cognitive dysfunction but studies have not assessed how emphysema, a structural phenotype of lung disease, might be associated with cognitive function independent from pulmonary function measured by spirometry. We aimed to determine the relationship between the presence of visually detectable emphysema on chest computed tomography (CT) imaging and cognitive function.MethodsWe examined 2491 participants, mean age of 50 years, from the Coronary Artery Risk Development in Young Adults study who were assessed for the presence of emphysema on chest CT imaging and had cognitive function measured 5 years later with a battery of six cognitive tests.ResultsOf those assessed, 172 (7%) had emphysema. After adjusting for age, sex, height, study centre, race, body mass index, education and smoking, visual emphysema was significantly associated with worse performance on most cognitive tests. Compared to those without emphysema, participants with emphysema performed worse on cognitive testing: 0.39 sd units lower (95% CI -0.53- -0.25) on the Montreal Cognitive Assessment, 0.27 sd units lower (95% CI -0.42- -0.12) on the Rey Auditory Verbal Learning Test, 0.29 sd units lower (95% CI -0.43- -0.14) on the Digit Symbol Substitution Test and 0.25 sd units lower (95% CI -0.42- -0.09) on letter fluency. Further adjustment for forced expiratory volume in 1 s (FEV1), peak FEV1 and annualised FEV1 decline did not attenuate these associations.ConclusionsThe presence of emphysema on chest CT is associated with worse cognitive function, independent of airflow obstruction. These data suggest that emphysema may be a novel risk factor for cognitive impairment.
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- 2021
20. Clinical Phenotypes of Atopy and Asthma in COPD A Meta-analysis of SPIROMICS and COPDGene
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Putcha, Nirupama, Fawzy, Ashraf, Matsui, Elizabeth C, Liu, Mark C, Bowler, Russ P, Woodruff, Prescott G, O'Neal, Wanda K, Comellas, Alejandro P, Han, MeiLan K, Dransfield, Mark T, Wells, J Michael, Lugogo, Njira, Gao, Li, Talbot, C Conover, Hoffman, Eric A, Cooper, Christopher B, Paulin, Laura M, Kanner, Richard E, Criner, Gerard, Ortega, Victor E, Barr, R Graham, Krishnan, Jerry A, Martinez, Fernando J, Drummond, M Bradley, Wise, Robert A, Diette, Gregory B, Hersh, Craig P, and Hansel, Nadia N
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Cardiovascular Medicine and Haematology ,Clinical Sciences ,Tobacco Smoke and Health ,Lung ,Clinical Research ,Tobacco ,Asthma ,Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease ,Respiratory ,Asthma-Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease Overlap Syndrome ,Biological Variation ,Population ,Disease Management ,Female ,Humans ,Hypersensitivity ,Immediate ,Immunoglobulin E ,Male ,Middle Aged ,Molecular Epidemiology ,Prevalence ,Pulmonary Disease ,Chronic Obstructive ,Risk Factors ,Smoking ,Status Asthmaticus ,asthma COPD overlap ,atopy ,COPD ,Respiratory System ,Cardiovascular medicine and haematology ,Clinical sciences - Abstract
BackgroundLittle is known about the concordance of atopy with asthma COPD overlap. Among individuals with COPD, a better understanding of the phenotypes characterized by asthma overlap and atopy is needed to better target therapies.Research questionWhat is the overlap between atopy and asthma status among individuals with COPD, and how are categories defined by the presence of atopy and asthma status associated with clinical and radiologic phenotypes and outcomes in the Genetic Epidemiology of COPD Study (COPDGene) and Subpopulation and Intermediate Outcome Measures in COPD Study (SPIROMICS)?Study design and methodsFour hundred three individuals with COPD from SPIROMICS and 696 individuals from COPDGene with data about specific IgEs to 10 common allergens and mixes (simultaneous assessment of combination of allergens in similar category) were included. Comparison groups were defined by atopic and asthma status (neither, atopy alone, atopic asthma, nonatopic asthma, with atopy defined as any positive specific IgE (≥0.35 KU/L) to any of the 10 allergens or mixes and asthma defined as self-report of doctor-diagnosed current asthma). Multivariable regression analyses (linear, logistic, and zero inflated negative binomial where appropriate) adjusted for age, sex, race, lung function, smoking status, pack-years smoked, and use of inhaled corticosteroids were used to determine characteristics of groups and relationship with outcomes (exacerbations, clinical outcomes, CT metrics) separately in COPDGene and SPIROMICS, and then adjusted results were combined using meta-analysis.ResultsThe prevalence of atopy was 35% and 36% in COPD subjects from SPIROMICS and COPDGene, respectively, and less than 50% overlap was seen between atopic status with asthma in both cohorts. In meta-analysis, individuals with nonatopic asthma had the most impaired symptom scores (effect size for St. George's Respiratory Questionnaire total score, 4.2; 95% CI, 0.4-7.9; effect size for COPD Assessment Test score, 2.8; 95% CI, 0.089-5.4), highest risk for exacerbations (incidence rate ratio, 1.41; 95% CI, 1.05-1.88) compared with the group without atopy or asthma. Those with atopy and atopic asthma were not at increased risk for adverse outcomes.InterpretationAsthma and atopy had incomplete overlap among former and current smokers with COPD in COPDGene and SPIROMICS. Nonatopic asthma was associated with adverse outcomes and exacerbation risk in COPD, whereas groups having atopy alone and atopic asthma had less risk.
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- 2020
21. Heme metabolism genes Downregulated in COPD Cachexia
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Wilson, Ava C, Kumar, Preeti L, Lee, Sool, Parker, Margaret M, Arora, Itika, Morrow, Jarrett D, Wouters, Emiel FM, Casaburi, Richard, Rennard, Stephen I, Lomas, David A, Agusti, Alvar, Tal-Singer, Ruth, Dransfield, Mark T, Wells, J Michael, Bhatt, Surya P, Washko, George, Thannickal, Victor J, Tiwari, Hemant K, Hersh, Craig P, Castaldi, Peter J, Silverman, Edwin K, and McDonald, Merry-Lynn N
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Hematology ,Lung ,Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease ,Clinical Research ,Genetics ,Nutrition ,Respiratory ,Aged ,Aged ,80 and over ,Cachexia ,Cohort Studies ,Down-Regulation ,Female ,Follow-Up Studies ,Genome-Wide Association Study ,Heme ,Humans ,Longitudinal Studies ,Male ,Middle Aged ,Pulmonary Disease ,Chronic Obstructive ,Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease ,Cardiorespiratory Medicine and Haematology ,Clinical Sciences ,Respiratory System - Abstract
IntroductionCachexia contributes to increased mortality and reduced quality of life in Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (COPD) and may be associated with underlying gene expression changes. Our goal was to identify differential gene expression signatures associated with COPD cachexia in current and former smokers.MethodsWe analyzed whole-blood gene expression data from participants with COPD in a discovery cohort (COPDGene, N = 400) and assessed replication (ECLIPSE, N = 114). To approximate the consensus definition using available criteria, cachexia was defined as weight-loss > 5% in the past 12 months or low body mass index (BMI) ( 5% in the past 12 months or low BMI and 3/5 criteria: decreased muscle strength, anorexia, abnormal biochemistry (anemia or high c-reactive protein (> 5 mg/l)), fatigue, and low FFMI. Differential gene expression was assessed between cachectic and non-cachectic subjects, adjusting for age, sex, white blood cell counts, and technical covariates. Gene set enrichment analysis was performed using MSigDB.ResultsThe prevalence of COPD cachexia was 13.7% in COPDGene and 7.9% in ECLIPSE. Fourteen genes were differentially downregulated in cachectic versus non-cachectic COPD patients in COPDGene (FDR
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- 2020
22. A Risk Prediction Model for Mortality Among Smokers in the COPDGene® Study.
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Strand, Matthew, Austin, Erin, Moll, Matthew, Pratte, Katherine A, Regan, Elizabeth A, Hayden, Lystra P, Bhatt, Surya P, Boriek, Aladin M, Casaburi, Richard, Silverman, Edwin K, Fortis, Spyridon, Ruczinski, Ingo, Koegler, Harald, Rossiter, Harry B, Occhipinti, Mariaelena, Hanania, Nicola A, Gebrekristos, Hirut T, Lynch, David A, Kunisaki, Ken M, Young, Kendra A, Sieren, Jessica C, Ragland, Margaret, Hokanson, John E, Lutz, Sharon M, Make, Barry J, Kinney, Gregory L, Cho, Michael H, Pistolesi, Massimo, DeMeo, Dawn L, Sciurba, Frank C, Comellas, Alejandro P, Diaz, Alejandro A, Barjaktarevic, Igor, Bowler, Russell P, Kanner, Richard E, Peters, Stephen P, Ortega, Victor E, Dransfield, Mark T, and Crapo, James D
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Epidemiology ,Public Health ,Health Sciences ,Clinical Sciences ,Prevention ,Lung ,Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease ,Women's Health ,Respiratory ,Good Health and Well Being ,COPD ,COPD Genetic Epidemiology study ,COPDGene ,spirometry ,preserved ratio-impaired spiromety ,PRISm ,risk score ,copd ,preserved ratio-impaired spirometry - Abstract
BackgroundRisk factor identification is a proven strategy in advancing treatments and preventive therapy for many chronic conditions. Quantifying the impact of those risk factors on health outcomes can consolidate and focus efforts on individuals with specific high-risk profiles. Using multiple risk factors and longitudinal outcomes in 2 independent cohorts, we developed and validated a risk score model to predict mortality in current and former cigarette smokers.MethodsWe obtained extensive data on current and former smokers from the COPD Genetic Epidemiology (COPDGene®) study at enrollment. Based on physician input and model goodness-of-fit measures, a subset of variables was selected to fit final Weibull survival models separately for men and women. Coefficients and predictors were translated into a point system, allowing for easy computation of mortality risk scores and probabilities. We then used the SubPopulations and InteRmediate Outcome Measures In COPD Study (SPIROMICS) cohort for external validation of our model.ResultsOf 9867 COPDGene participants with standard baseline data, 17.6% died over 10 years of follow-up, and 9074 of these participants had the full set of baseline predictors (standard plus 6-minute walk distance and computed tomography variables) available for full model fits. The average age of participants in the cohort was 60 for both men and women, and the average predicted 10-year mortality risk was 18% for women and 25% for men. Model time-integrated area under the receiver operating characteristic curve statistics demonstrated good predictive model accuracy (0.797 average), validated in the external cohort (0.756 average). Risk of mortality was impacted most by 6-minute walk distance, forced expiratory volume in 1 second and age, for both men and women.ConclusionsCurrent and former smokers exhibited a wide range of mortality risk over a 10- year period. Our models can identify higher risk individuals who can be targeted for interventions to reduce risk of mortality, for participants with or without chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) using current Global initiative for obstructive Lung Disease (GOLD) criteria.
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- 2020
23. The Effects of Rare SERPINA1 Variants on Lung Function and Emphysema in SPIROMICS
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Ortega, Victor E, Li, Xingnan, O’Neal, Wanda K, Lackey, Lela, Ampleford, Elizabeth, Hawkins, Gregory A, Grayeski, Philip J, Laederach, Alain, Barjaktarevic, Igor, Barr, R Graham, Cooper, Christopher, Couper, David, Han, MeiLan K, Kanner, Richard E, Kleerup, Eric C, Martinez, Fernando J, Paine, Robert, Peters, Stephen P, Pirozzi, Cheryl, Rennard, Stephen I, Woodruff, Prescott G, Hoffman, Eric A, Meyers, Deborah A, Bleecker, Eugene R, Alexis, Neil E, Anderson, Wayne H, Arjomandi, Mehrdad, Bateman, Lori A, Bhatt, Surya P, Boucher, Richard C, Bowler, Russell P, Christenson, Stephanie A, Comellas, Alejandro P, Criner, Gerard J, Crystal, Ronald G, Curtis, Jeffrey L, Doerschuk, Claire M, Dransfield, Mark T, Freeman, Christine M, Galban, Craig, Hansel, Nadia N, Hastie, Annette T, Huang, Yvonne, Kaner, Robert J, Krishnan, Jerry A, LaVange, Lisa M, Lazarus, Stephen C, Moore, Wendy C, Paulin, Laura, Putcha, Nirupama, Oelsner, Elizabeth C, Raman, Sanjeev, Tashkin, Donald P, Wells, J Michael, and Wise, Robert A
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Cardiovascular Medicine and Haematology ,Clinical Sciences ,Tobacco ,Emphysema ,Clinical Research ,Genetics ,Tobacco Smoke and Health ,Lung ,Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease ,2.1 Biological and endogenous factors ,Aetiology ,Respiratory ,Adult ,Black or African American ,Aged ,Aged ,80 and over ,Female ,Forced Expiratory Volume ,Genotype ,Heterozygote ,Hispanic or Latino ,Humans ,Isoelectric Focusing ,Male ,Maximal Midexpiratory Flow Rate ,Middle Aged ,Phenotype ,Polymorphism ,Genetic ,Pulmonary Disease ,Chronic Obstructive ,Pulmonary Emphysema ,Smoking ,Tomography ,X-Ray Computed ,Vital Capacity ,White People ,alpha 1-Antitrypsin ,chronic obstructive pulmonary disease ,alpha-1 antitrypsin ,SERPINA1 ,rare variant ,emphysema ,NHLBI Subpopulations and Intermediate Outcomes Measures in COPD Study ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Respiratory System ,Cardiovascular medicine and haematology ,Clinical sciences - Abstract
Rationale: The role of PI (protease inhibitor) type Z heterozygotes and additional rare variant genotypes in the gene encoding alpha-1 antitrypsin, SERPINA1 (serpin peptidase inhibitor, clade A, member 1), in determining chronic obstructive pulmonary disease risk and severity is controversial.Objectives: To comprehensively evaluate the effects of rare SERPINA1 variants on lung function and emphysema phenotypes in subjects with significant tobacco smoke exposure using deep gene resequencing and alpha-1 antitrypsin concentrations.Methods: DNA samples from 1,693 non-Hispanic white individuals, 385 African Americans, and 90 Hispanics with ≥20 pack-years smoking were resequenced for the identification of rare variants (allele frequency
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- 2020
24. Reduced quantity and function of pneumococcal antibodies are associated with exacerbations of COPD in SPIROMICS
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LaFon, David C., Woo, Han, Fedarko, Neal, Azar, Antoine, Hill, Harry, Tebo, Anne E., Martins, Thomas B., Han, MeiLan K., Krishnan, Jerry A., Ortega, Victor E., Barjaktarevic, Igor, Kaner, Robert J., Hastie, Annette, O'Neal, Wanda K., Couper, David, Woodruff, Prescott G., Curtis, Jeffrey L., Hansel, Nadia N., Nahm, Moon H., Dransfield, Mark T., and Putcha, Nirupama
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- 2023
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25. Bronchodilator Responsiveness in Tobacco-Exposed People With or Without COPD
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Alexis, Neil E., Anderson, Wayne H., Arjomandi, Mehrdad, Barjaktarevic, Igor, Barr, R. Graham, Basta, Patricia, Bateman, Lori A., Bhatt, Surya P., Bleecker, Eugene R., Boucher, Richard C., Bowler, Russell P., Christenson, Stephanie A., Comellas, Alejandro P., Cooper, Christopher B., Couper, David J., Criner, Gerard J., Crystal, Ronald G., Curtis, Jeffrey L., Doerschuk, Claire M., Dransfield, Mark T., Drummond, Brad, Freeman, Christine M., Galban, Craig, Han, MeiLan K., Hansel, Nadia N., Hastie, Annette T., Hoffman, Eric A., Huang, Yvonne, Kaner, Robert J., Kanner, Richard E., Kleerup, Eric C., Krishnan, Jerry A., LaVange, Lisa M., Lazarus, Stephen C., Martinez, Fernando J., Meyers, Deborah A., Moore, Wendy C., Newell, John D., Jr., Paine, Robert, III, Paulin, Laura, Peters, Stephen P., Pirozzi, Cheryl, Putcha, Nirupama, Oelsner, Elizabeth C., O’Neal, Wanda K., Ortega, Victor E., Raman, Sanjeev, Rennard, Stephen I., Tashkin, Donald P., Wells, J. Michael, Wise, Robert A., Woodruff, Prescott G., Fortis, Spyridon, Quibrera, Pedro M., Dransfield, Mark B., Dolezal, Brett A., Kim, Victor, Barjaktarevic, Igor Z., and Couper, David
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- 2023
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26. Clinical Implications of Low Absolute Blood Eosinophil Count in the SPIROMICS COPD Cohort
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LeMaster, W. Blake, Quibrera, P. Miguel, Couper, David, Tashkin, Donald P., Bleecker, Eugene R., Doerschuk, Claire M., Ortega, Victor E., Cooper, Christopher, Han, MeiLan K., Woodruff, Prescott G., O’Neal, Wanda K., Anderson, Wayne H., Alexis, Neil E., Bowler, Russell P., Barr, R. Graham, Kaner, Robert J., Dransfield, Mark T., Paine, Robert, III, Kim, Victor, Curtis, Jeffrey L., Martinez, Fernando J., Hastie, Annette T., and Barjaktarevic, Igor
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- 2023
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27. Beta-blocker use in patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease: A systematic review: A systematic review of βB in COPD
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Ruzieh, Mohammed, Baugh, Aaron D, Al Jebbawi, Lama, Edwards, Emily S, Jia, Kelly Qi, Dransfield, Mark T, and Foy, Andrew J
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- 2023
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28. The Association Between Neighborhood Socioeconomic Disadvantage and Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease
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Galiatsatos, Panagis, Woo, Han, Paulin, Laura M, Kind, Amy, Putcha, Nirupama, Gassett, Amanda J, Cooper, Christopher B, Dransfield, Mark T, Parekh, Trisha M, Oates, Gabriela R, Barr, R Graham, Comellas, Alejandro P, Han, Meilan K, Peters, Stephen P, Krishnan, Jerry A, Labaki, Wassim W, McCormack, Meredith C, Kaufman, Joel D, and Hansel, Nadia N
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Cardiovascular Medicine and Haematology ,Prevention ,Clinical Research ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease ,Lung ,Clinical Trials and Supportive Activities ,Respiratory ,Body Mass Index ,Humans ,Pulmonary Disease ,Chronic Obstructive ,Residence Characteristics ,Social Class ,Socioeconomic Factors ,health disparities ,COPD ,area deprivation index ,Cardiorespiratory Medicine and Haematology ,Respiratory System ,Cardiovascular medicine and haematology - Abstract
RationaleIndividual socioeconomic status has been shown to influence the outcomes of patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD). However, contextual factors may also play a role. The objective of this study is to evaluate the association between neighborhood socioeconomic disadvantage measured by the area deprivation index (ADI) and COPD-related outcomes.MethodsResidential addresses of SubPopulations and InteRmediate Outcome Measures in COPD Study (SPIROMICS) subjects with COPD (FEV1/FVC
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- 2020
29. Novel Respiratory Disability Score Predicts COPD Exacerbations and Mortality in the SPIROMICS Cohort
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Cooper, Christopher B, Paine, Robert, Curtis, Jeffrey L, Kanner, Richard E, Martinez, Carlos H, Meldrum, Catherine A, Bowler, Russell, O’Neal, Wanda, Hoffman, Eric A, Couper, David, Quibrera, Miguel, Criner, Gerald, Dransfield, Mark T, Han, MeiLan K, Hansel, Nadia N, Krishnan, Jerry A, Lazarus, Stephen C, Peters, Stephen P, Barr, R Graham, Martinez, Fernando J, and Woodruff, Prescott G
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Research ,Tobacco Smoke and Health ,Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease ,Tobacco ,Lung ,Respiratory ,Good Health and Well Being ,Cohort Studies ,Dyspnea ,Female ,Humans ,Male ,Pulmonary Disease ,Chronic Obstructive ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,disability ,frailty ,exacerbation rate ,mortality ,SPIROMICS ,SPIROMICS investigators ,Cardiorespiratory Medicine and Haematology ,Respiratory System ,Cardiovascular medicine and haematology - Abstract
RationaleSome COPD patients develop extreme breathlessness, decreased exercise capacity and poor health status yet respiratory disability is poorly characterized as a distinct phenotype.ObjectiveTo define respiratory disability in COPD based on available functional measures and to determine associations with risk for exacerbations and death.MethodsWe analyzed baseline data from a multi-center observational study (SPIROMICS). This analysis includes 2332 participants (472 with severe COPD, 991 with mild/moderate COPD, 726 smokers without airflow obstruction and 143 non-smoking controls).MeasurementsWe defined respiratory disability by ≥4 of 7 criteria: mMRC dyspnea scale ≥3; Veterans Specific Activity Questionnaire 60; COPD Assessment Test >20; fatigue (FACIT-F Trial Outcome Index)
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- 2020
30. Erratum: Clinical Significance of Bronchodilator Responsiveness Evaluated by Forced Vital Capacity in COPD: SPIROMICS Cohort Analysis [Corrigendum].
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Barjaktarevic, Igor, Buhr, Russell G, Wang, Xiaoyan, Hu, Scott, Couper, David, Anderson, Wayne, Kanner, Richard E, Paine III, Robert, Bhatt, Surya P, Bhakta, Nirav R, Arjomandi, Mehrdad, Kaner, Robert J, Pirozzi, Cheryl S, Curtis, Jeffrey L, O'Neal, Wanda K, Woodruff, Prescott G, Han, MeiLan K, Martinez, Fernando J, Hansel, Nadia, Wells, James Michael, Ortega, Victor E, Hoffman, Eric, Doerschuk, Claire M, Kim, Victor, Dransfield, Mark T, Drummond, M Bradley, Bowler, Russell, Criner, Gerard, Christenson, Stephanie A, Ronish, Bonnie, Peters, Stephen, Krishnan, Jerry A, Tashkin, Donald, and Cooper, Christopher
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Cardiorespiratory Medicine and Haematology ,Respiratory System - Abstract
[This corrects the article DOI: 10.2147/COPD.S220164.].
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- 2020
31. Clinical Significance of Bronchodilator Responsiveness Evaluated by Forced Vital Capacity in COPD: SPIROMICS Cohort Analysis
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Barjaktarevic, Igor Z, Buhr, Russell G, Wang, Xiaoyan, Hu, Scott, Couper, David, Anderson, Wayne, Kanner, Richard E, Paine, Robert, Bhatt, Surya P, Bhakta, Nirav R, Arjomandi, Mehrdad, Kaner, Robert J, Pirozzi, Cheryl S, Curtis, Jeffrey L, O’Neal, Wanda K, Woodruff, Prescott G, Han, MeiLan K, Martinez, Fernando J, Hansel, Nadia, Wells, James Michael, Ortega, Victor E, Hoffman, Eric A, Doerschuk, Claire M, Kim, Victor, Dransfield, Mark T, Drummond, M Bradley, Bowler, Russell, Criner, Gerard, Christenson, Stephanie A, Ronish, Bonnie, Peters, Stephen P, Krishnan, Jerry A, Tashkin, Donald P, Cooper, Christopher B, and Study, On behalf of the NHLBI SubPopulations and InteRmediate Outcome Measures In COPD
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Cardiovascular Medicine and Haematology ,Lung ,Emphysema ,Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease ,Respiratory ,Good Health and Well Being ,Adult ,Airway Obstruction ,Asthma ,Biological Variation ,Population ,Bronchodilator Agents ,Disease Progression ,Female ,Forced Expiratory Volume ,Humans ,Male ,Middle Aged ,Prevalence ,Proportional Hazards Models ,Pulmonary Disease ,Chronic Obstructive ,Pulmonary Emphysema ,Treatment Outcome ,United States ,Vital Capacity ,bronchodilator responsiveness ,inspiratory capacity ,FVC ,FEV1 ,SPIROMICS ,NHLBI SubPopulations and InteRmediate Outcome Measures In COPD Study ,Cardiorespiratory Medicine and Haematology ,Respiratory System ,Cardiovascular medicine and haematology - Abstract
ObjectiveBronchodilator responsiveness (BDR) is prevalent in COPD, but its clinical implications remain unclear. We explored the significance of BDR, defined by post-bronchodilator change in FEV1 (BDRFEV1) as a measure reflecting the change in flow and in FVC (BDRFVC) reflecting the change in volume.MethodsWe analyzed 2974 participants from a multicenter observational study designed to identify varying COPD phenotypes (SPIROMICS). We evaluated the association of BDR with baseline clinical characteristics, rate of prospective exacerbations and mortality using negative binomial regression and Cox proportional hazards models.ResultsA majority of COPD participants exhibited BDR (52.7%). BDRFEV1 occurred more often in earlier stages of COPD, while BDRFVC occurred more frequently in more advanced disease. When defined by increases in either FEV1 or FVC, BDR was associated with a self-reported history of asthma, but not with blood eosinophil counts. BDRFVC was more prevalent in subjects with greater emphysema and small airway disease on CT. In a univariate analysis, BDRFVC was associated with increased exacerbations and mortality, although no significance was found in a model adjusted for post-bronchodilator FEV1.ConclusionWith advanced airflow obstruction in COPD, BDRFVC is more prevalent in comparison to BDRFEV1 and correlates with the extent of emphysema and degree of small airway disease. Since these associations appear to be related to the impairment of FEV1, BDRFVC itself does not define a distinct phenotype nor can it be more predictive of outcomes, but it can offer additional insights into the pathophysiologic mechanism in advanced COPD.Clinical trials registrationClinicalTrials.gov: NCT01969344T4.
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- 2019
32. Metoprolol for the Prevention of Acute Exacerbations of COPD
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Dransfield, Mark T, Voelker, Helen, Bhatt, Surya P, Brenner, Keith, Casaburi, Richard, Come, Carolyn E, Cooper, J Allen D, Criner, Gerard J, Curtis, Jeffrey L, Han, MeiLan K, Hatipoğlu, Umur, Helgeson, Erika S, Jain, Vipul V, Kalhan, Ravi, Kaminsky, David, Kaner, Robert, Kunisaki, Ken M, Lambert, Allison A, Lammi, Matthew R, Lindberg, Sarah, Make, Barry J, Martinez, Fernando J, McEvoy, Charlene, Panos, Ralph J, Reed, Robert M, Scanlon, Paul D, Sciurba, Frank C, Smith, Anthony, Sriram, Peruvemba S, Stringer, William W, Weingarten, Jeremy A, Wells, J Michael, Westfall, Elizabeth, Lazarus, Stephen C, and Connett, John E
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Clinical Trials and Supportive Activities ,Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease ,Lung ,Clinical Research ,6.1 Pharmaceuticals ,Evaluation of treatments and therapeutic interventions ,Respiratory ,Adrenergic beta-1 Receptor Antagonists ,Aged ,Aged ,80 and over ,Disease Progression ,Female ,Forced Expiratory Volume ,Hospitalization ,Humans ,Kaplan-Meier Estimate ,Male ,Metoprolol ,Middle Aged ,Prospective Studies ,Pulmonary Disease ,Chronic Obstructive ,Treatment Failure ,BLOCK COPD Trial Group ,Medical and Health Sciences ,General & Internal Medicine - Abstract
BackgroundObservational studies suggest that beta-blockers may reduce the risk of exacerbations and death in patients with moderate or severe chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), but these findings have not been confirmed in randomized trials.MethodsIn this prospective, randomized trial, we assigned patients between the ages of 40 and 85 years who had COPD to receive either a beta-blocker (extended-release metoprolol) or placebo. All the patients had a clinical history of COPD, along with moderate airflow limitation and an increased risk of exacerbations, as evidenced by a history of exacerbations during the previous year or the prescribed use of supplemental oxygen. We excluded patients who were already taking a beta-blocker or who had an established indication for the use of such drugs. The primary end point was the time until the first exacerbation of COPD during the treatment period, which ranged from 336 to 350 days, depending on the adjusted dose of metoprolol.ResultsA total of 532 patients underwent randomization. The mean (±SD) age of the patients was 65.0±7.8 years; the mean forced expiratory volume in 1 second (FEV1) was 41.1±16.3% of the predicted value. The trial was stopped early because of futility with respect to the primary end point and safety concerns. There was no significant between-group difference in the median time until the first exacerbation, which was 202 days in the metoprolol group and 222 days in the placebo group (hazard ratio for metoprolol vs. placebo, 1.05; 95% confidence interval [CI], 0.84 to 1.32; P = 0.66). Metoprolol was associated with a higher risk of exacerbation leading to hospitalization (hazard ratio, 1.91; 95% CI, 1.29 to 2.83). The frequency of side effects that were possibly related to metoprolol was similar in the two groups, as was the overall rate of nonrespiratory serious adverse events. During the treatment period, there were 11 deaths in the metoprolol group and 5 in the placebo group.ConclusionsAmong patients with moderate or severe COPD who did not have an established indication for beta-blocker use, the time until the first COPD exacerbation was similar in the metoprolol group and the placebo group. Hospitalization for exacerbation was more common among the patients treated with metoprolol. (Funded by the Department of Defense; BLOCK COPD ClinicalTrials.gov number, NCT02587351.).
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- 2019
33. COPDGene® 2019: Redefining the Diagnosis of Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease.
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Lowe, Katherine E, Regan, Elizabeth A, Anzueto, Antonio, Austin, Erin, Austin, John HM, Beaty, Terri H, Benos, Panayiotis V, Benway, Christopher J, Bhatt, Surya P, Bleecker, Eugene R, Bodduluri, Sandeep, Bon, Jessica, Boriek, Aladin M, Boueiz, Adel Re, Bowler, Russell P, Budoff, Matthew, Casaburi, Richard, Castaldi, Peter J, Charbonnier, Jean-Paul, Cho, Michael H, Comellas, Alejandro, Conrad, Douglas, Costa Davis, Corinne, Criner, Gerard J, Curran-Everett, Douglas, Curtis, Jeffrey L, DeMeo, Dawn L, Diaz, Alejandro A, Dransfield, Mark T, Dy, Jennifer G, Fawzy, Ashraf, Fleming, Margaret, Flenaugh, Eric L, Foreman, Marilyn G, Fortis, Spyridon, Gebrekristos, Hirut, Grant, Sarah, Grenier, Philippe A, Gu, Tian, Gupta, Abhya, Han, MeiLan K, Hanania, Nicola A, Hansel, Nadia N, Hayden, Lystra P, Hersh, Craig P, Hobbs, Brian D, Hoffman, Eric A, Hogg, James C, Hokanson, John E, Hoth, Karin F, Hsiao, Albert, Humphries, Stephen, Jacobs, Kathleen, Jacobson, Francine L, Kazerooni, Ella A, Kim, Victor, Kim, Woo Jin, Kinney, Gregory L, Koegler, Harald, Lutz, Sharon M, Lynch, David A, MacIntye, Neil R, Make, Barry J, Marchetti, Nathaniel, Martinez, Fernando J, Maselli, Diego J, Mathews, Anne M, McCormack, Meredith C, McDonald, Merry-Lynn N, McEvoy, Charlene E, Moll, Matthew, Molye, Sarah S, Murray, Susan, Nath, Hrudaya, Newell, John D, Occhipinti, Mariaelena, Paoletti, Matteo, Parekh, Trisha, Pistolesi, Massimo, Pratte, Katherine A, Putcha, Nirupama, Ragland, Margaret, Reinhardt, Joseph M, Rennard, Stephen I, Rosiello, Richard A, Ross, James C, Rossiter, Harry B, Ruczinski, Ingo, San Jose Estepar, Raul, Sciurba, Frank C, Sieren, Jessica C, Singh, Harjinder, Soler, Xavier, Steiner, Robert M, Strand, Matthew J, Stringer, William W, Tal-Singer, Ruth, Thomashow, Byron, Vegas Sánchez-Ferrero, Gonzalo, and Walsh, John W
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COPD Genetic Epidemiology study ,preserved ratio-impaired spirometry ,COPD diagnosis ,COPD diagnosis ,COPDGene ,GOLD ,Global initiative for chronic Obstructive Lung Dis ,PRISm ,chronic obstructive pulmonary disease ,copd ,preserved ratio-impaired spirometry ,spirometry ,Prevention ,Tobacco Smoke and Health ,Tobacco ,Lung ,Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease ,Biomedical Imaging ,Clinical Research ,4.2 Evaluation of markers and technologies ,Detection ,screening and diagnosis ,4.1 Discovery and preclinical testing of markers and technologies ,Respiratory ,Good Health and Well Being ,COPD ,COPD Genetic Epidemiology study ,Global initiative for chronic Obstructive Lung Disease - Abstract
BackgroundChronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) remains a major cause of morbidity and mortality. Present-day diagnostic criteria are largely based solely on spirometric criteria. Accumulating evidence has identified a substantial number of individuals without spirometric evidence of COPD who suffer from respiratory symptoms and/or increased morbidity and mortality. There is a clear need for an expanded definition of COPD that is linked to physiologic, structural (computed tomography [CT]) and clinical evidence of disease. Using data from the COPD Genetic Epidemiology study (COPDGene®), we hypothesized that an integrated approach that includes environmental exposure, clinical symptoms, chest CT imaging and spirometry better defines disease and captures the likelihood of progression of respiratory obstruction and mortality.MethodsFour key disease characteristics - environmental exposure (cigarette smoking), clinical symptoms (dyspnea and/or chronic bronchitis), chest CT imaging abnormalities (emphysema, gas trapping and/or airway wall thickening), and abnormal spirometry - were evaluated in a group of 8784 current and former smokers who were participants in COPDGene® Phase 1. Using these 4 disease characteristics, 8 categories of participants were identified and evaluated for odds of spirometric disease progression (FEV1 > 350 ml loss over 5 years), and the hazard ratio for all-cause mortality was examined.ResultsUsing smokers without symptoms, CT imaging abnormalities or airflow obstruction as the reference population, individuals were classified as Possible COPD, Probable COPD and Definite COPD. Current Global initiative for obstructive Lung Disease (GOLD) criteria would diagnose 4062 (46%) of the 8784 study participants with COPD. The proposed COPDGene® 2019 diagnostic criteria would add an additional 3144 participants. Under the new criteria, 82% of the 8784 study participants would be diagnosed with Possible, Probable or Definite COPD. These COPD groups showed increased risk of disease progression and mortality. Mortality increased in patients as the number of their COPD characteristics increased, with a maximum hazard ratio for all cause-mortality of 5.18 (95% confidence interval [CI]: 4.15-6.48) in those with all 4 disease characteristics.ConclusionsA substantial portion of smokers with respiratory symptoms and imaging abnormalities do not manifest spirometric obstruction as defined by population normals. These individuals are at significant risk of death and spirometric disease progression. We propose to redefine the diagnosis of COPD through an integrated approach using environmental exposure, clinical symptoms, CT imaging and spirometric criteria. These expanded criteria offer the potential to stimulate both current and future interventions that could slow or halt disease progression in patients before disability or irreversible lung structural changes develop.
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- 2019
34. The matrikine acetyl-proline-glycine-proline and clinical features of COPD: findings from SPIROMICS.
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Wells, J Michael, Xing, Dongqi, Viera, Liliana, Burkes, Robert M, Wu, Yixin, Bhatt, Surya P, Dransfield, Mark T, Couper, David J, O'Neal, Wanda, Hoffman, Eric A, Gaggar, Amit, Barjaktarevic, Igor, Curtis, Jeffrey L, Labaki, Wassim W, Han, Mei Lan K, Freeman, Christine M, Putcha, Nirupama, Schlange, Thomas, Blalock, J Edwin, and SPIROMICS Investigators,
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SPIROMICS Investigators ,Sputum ,Humans ,Pulmonary Disease ,Chronic Obstructive ,Proline ,Glycine ,Spirometry ,Cohort Studies ,Prospective Studies ,Aged ,Middle Aged ,Female ,Male ,Biomarkers ,Acetyl proline-glycine-proline ,Biomarker ,COPD ,Inflammation ,Matrikine ,Lung ,Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease ,Clinical Research ,Respiratory ,Cardiorespiratory Medicine and Haematology ,Clinical Sciences ,Respiratory System - Abstract
BackgroundPulmonary and systemic inflammation are central features of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD). Previous studies have demonstrated relationships between biologically active extracellular matrix components, or matrikines, and COPD pathogenesis. We studied the relationships between the matrikine acetyl-proline-glycine-proline (AcPGP) in sputum and plasma and clinical features of COPD.MethodsSputum and plasma samples were obtained from COPD participants in the SPIROMICS cohort at enrollment. AcPGP was isolated using solid phase extraction and measured by mass spectrometry. Demographics, spirometry, quality of life questionnaires, and quantitative computed tomography (CT) imaging with parametric response mapping (PRM) were obtained at baseline. Severe COPD exacerbations were recorded at 1-year of prospective follow-up. We used linear and logistic regression models to measure associations between AcPGP and features of COPD, and Kaplan-Meier analyses to measure time-to-first severe exacerbation.ResultsThe 182 COPD participants in the analysis were 66 ± 8 years old, 62% male, 84% White race, and 39% were current smokers. AcPGP concentrations were 0.61 ± 1.89 ng/mL (mean ± SD) in sputum and 0.60 ± 1.13 ng/mL in plasma. In adjusted linear regression models, sputum AcPGP was associated with FEV1/FVC, spirometric GOLD stage, PRM-small airways disease, and PRM-emphysema. Sputum AcPGP also correlated with severe AECOPD, and elevated sputum AcPGP was associated with shorter time-to-first severe COPD exacerbation. In contrast, plasma AcPGP was not associated with symptoms, pulmonary function, or severe exacerbation risk.ConclusionsIn COPD, sputum but not plasma AcPGP concentrations are associated with the severity of airflow limitation, small airways disease, emphysema, and risk for severe AECOPD at 1-year of follow-up.Trial registrationClinicalTrials.gov: NCT01969344 (SPIROMICS).
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- 2019
35. A Genetic Risk Score Associated with Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease Susceptibility and Lung Structure on Computed Tomography
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Oelsner, Elizabeth C, Ortega, Victor E, Smith, Benjamin M, Nguyen, Jennifer N, Manichaikul, Ani W, Hoffman, Eric A, Guo, Xiuqing, Taylor, Kent D, Woodruff, Prescott G, Couper, David J, Hansel, Nadia N, Martinez, Fernando J, Paine, Robert, Han, Meilan K, Cooper, Christopher, Dransfield, Mark T, Criner, Gerard, Krishnan, Jerry A, Bowler, Russell, Bleecker, Eugene R, Peters, Stephen, Rich, Stephen S, Meyers, Deborah A, Rotter, Jerome I, and Barr, R Graham
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Cardiovascular Medicine and Haematology ,Clinical Sciences ,Prevention ,Genetics ,Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease ,Biomedical Imaging ,Lung ,Respiratory ,Good Health and Well Being ,Aged ,Female ,Genetic Predisposition to Disease ,Humans ,Male ,Middle Aged ,Pulmonary Disease ,Chronic Obstructive ,Risk Assessment ,Tomography ,X-Ray Computed ,United States ,spirometry ,emphysema ,airway remodeling ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Respiratory System ,Cardiovascular medicine and haematology ,Clinical sciences - Abstract
Rationale: Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) has been associated with numerous genetic variants, yet the extent to which its genetic risk is mediated by variation in lung structure remains unknown.Objectives: To characterize associations between a genetic risk score (GRS) associated with COPD susceptibility and lung structure on computed tomography (CT).Methods: We analyzed data from MESA Lung (Multi-Ethnic Study of Atherosclerosis Lung Study), a U.S. general population-based cohort, and SPIROMICS (Subpopulations and Intermediate Outcome Measures in COPD Study). A weighted GRS was calculated from 83 SNPs that were previously associated with lung function. Lung density, spatially matched airway dimensions, and airway counts were assessed on full-lung CT. Generalized linear models were adjusted for age, age squared, sex, height, principal components of genetic ancestry, smoking status, pack-years, CT model, milliamperes, and total lung volume.Measurements and Main Results: MESA Lung and SPIROMICS contributed 2,517 and 2,339 participants, respectively. Higher GRS was associated with lower lung function and increased COPD risk, as well as lower lung density, smaller airway lumens, and fewer small airways, without effect modification by smoking. Adjustment for CT lung structure, particularly small airway measures, attenuated associations between the GRS and FEV1/FVC by 100% and 60% in MESA and SPIROMICS, respectively. Lung structure (P 0.10), improved discrimination of moderate-to-severe COPD cases relative to clinical factors alone.Conclusions: A GRS associated with COPD susceptibility was associated with CT lung structure. Lung structure may be an important mediator of heritability and determinant of personalized COPD risk.
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- 2019
36. The Peak Index: Spirometry Metric for Airflow Obstruction Severity and Heterogeneity
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Bhatt, Surya P, Bodduluri, Sandeep, Raghav, Vrishank, Bhakta, Nirav R, Wilson, Carla G, Kim, Young-il, Eberlein, Michael, Sciurba, Frank C, Han, MeiLan K, Dransfield, Mark T, and Nakhmani, Arie
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Research ,Prevention ,Clinical Trials and Supportive Activities ,Lung ,Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease ,Respiratory ,Good Health and Well Being ,Aged ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Female ,Forced Expiratory Volume ,Humans ,Male ,Middle Aged ,Multivariate Analysis ,Pulmonary Disease ,Chronic Obstructive ,Pulmonary Emphysema ,Severity of Illness Index ,Smoking ,Spirometry ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Survival Analysis ,Tomography ,X-Ray Computed ,Walk Test ,airflow obstruction ,chronic obstructive pulmonary disease ,spirometry ,heterogeneity ,Cardiovascular medicine and haematology ,Clinical sciences - Abstract
Rationale: Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) is characterized by airflow limitation. Spirometry loops are not smooth curves and have undulations and peaks that likely reflect heterogeneity of airflow.Objectives: To assess whether the Peak Index, the number of peaks adjusted for lung size, is associated with clinical outcomes.Methods: We analyzed spirometry data of 9,584 participants enrolled in the COPDGene study and counted the number of peaks in the descending part of the expiratory flow-volume curve from the peak expiratory flow to end-expiration. We adjusted the peaks count for the volume of the lungs from peak expiratory flow to end-expiration to derive the Peak Index. Multivariable regression analyses were performed to test associations between the Peak Index and lung function, respiratory morbidity, structural lung disease on computed tomography (CT), forced expiratory volume in 1 second (FEV1) decline, and mortality.Results: The Peak Index progressively increased from Global Initiative for Chronic Obstructive Lung Disease stage 0 through 4 (P
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- 2019
37. Combined Forced Expiratory Volume in 1 Second and Forced Vital Capacity Bronchodilator Response, Exacerbations, and Mortality in Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease.
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Fortis, Spyridon, Comellas, Alejandro, Make, Barry J, Hersh, Craig P, Bodduluri, Sandeep, Georgopoulos, Dimitris, Kim, Victor, Criner, Gerard J, Dransfield, Mark T, Bhatt, Surya P, and COPDGene Investigators–Core Units: <italic>Administrative Center</italic>, COPDGene Investigators–Clinical Centers: <italic>Ann Arbor VA</italic>
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COPDGene Investigators–Core Units: Administrative Center ,COPDGene Investigators–Clinical Centers: Ann Arbor VA ,Humans ,Asthma ,Pulmonary Disease ,Chronic Obstructive ,Disease Progression ,Bronchodilator Agents ,Tomography ,X-Ray Computed ,Respiratory Function Tests ,Vital Capacity ,Forced Expiratory Volume ,Spirometry ,Treatment Outcome ,Severity of Illness Index ,Multivariate Analysis ,Logistic Models ,Proportional Hazards Models ,Risk Assessment ,Survival Analysis ,Retrospective Studies ,Cohort Studies ,Aged ,Middle Aged ,Female ,Male ,asthma ,bronchodilator agents ,chronic obstructive pulmonary disease ,mortality ,spirometry ,Clinical Research ,Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease ,Lung ,Respiratory ,Good Health and Well Being - Abstract
Rationale: The American Thoracic Society (ATS)/European Respiratory Society defines a positive bronchodilator response (BDR) by a composite of BDR in either forced expiratory volume in 1 second (FEV1) and/or forced vital capacity (FVC) greater than or equal to 12% and 200 ml (ATS-BDR). We hypothesized that ATS-BDR components would be differentially associated with important chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) outcomes. Objectives: To examine whether ATS-BDR components are differentially associated with clinical, functional, and radiographic features in COPD. Methods: We included subjects with COPD enrolled in the COPDGene study. In the main analysis, we excluded subjects with self-reported asthma. We categorized BDR into the following: 1) No-BDR, no BDR in either FEV1 or FVC; 2) FEV1-BDR, BDR in FEV1 but no BDR in FVC; 3) FVC-BDR, BDR in FVC but no BDR in FEV1; and 4) Combined-BDR, BDR in both FEV1 and FVC. We constructed multivariable logistic, linear, zero-inflated negative binomial, and Cox hazards models to examine the association of BDR categories with symptoms, computed tomography findings, change in FEV1 over time, respiratory exacerbations, and mortality. We also created models using the ATS BDR definition (ATS-BDR) as the main independent variable. Results: Of 3,340 COPD subjects included in the analysis, 1,083 (32.43%) had ATS-BDR, 182 (5.45%) had FEV1-BDR, 522 (15.63%) had FVC-BDR, and 379 (11.34%) had Combined-BDR. All BDR categories were associated with FEV1 decline compared with No-BDR. Compared with No-BDR, both ATS-BDR and Combined-BDR were associated with higher functional residual capacity %predicted, greater internal perimeter of 10 mm, and greater 6-minute-walk distance. In contrast to ATS-BDR, Combined-BDR was independently associated with less emphysema (adjusted beta regression coefficient, -1.67; 95% confidence interval [CI], -2.68 to -0.65; P = 0.001), more frequent respiratory exacerbations (incidence rate ratio, 1.25; 95% CI, 1.03-1.50; P = 0.02) and severe exacerbations (incidence rate ratio, 1.34; 95% CI, 1.05-1.71; P = 0.02), and lower mortality (adjusted hazards ratio, 0.76; 95% CI, 0.58-0.99; P = 0.046). Sensitivity analysis that included subjects with self-reported history of asthma showed similar findings. Conclusions: BDR in both FEV1 and FVC indicates a COPD phenotype with asthma-like characteristics, and provides clinically more meaningful information than current definitions of BDR.
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- 2019
38. Aspirin Use and Respiratory Morbidity in COPD: A Propensity Score-Matched Analysis in Subpopulations and Intermediate Outcome Measures in COPD Study.
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Fawzy, Ashraf, Putcha, Nirupama, Aaron, Carrie P, Bowler, Russell P, Comellas, Alejandro P, Cooper, Christopher B, Dransfield, Mark T, Han, MeiLan K, Hoffman, Eric A, Kanner, Richard E, Krishnan, Jerry A, Labaki, Wassim W, Paine, Robert, Paulin, Laura M, Peters, Stephen P, Wise, Robert, Barr, R Graham, Hansel, Nadia N, and SPIROMICS Investigators
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SPIROMICS Investigators ,Humans ,Pulmonary Disease ,Chronic Obstructive ,Aspirin ,Platelet Aggregation Inhibitors ,Glucocorticoids ,Anti-Bacterial Agents ,Respiratory Function Tests ,Severity of Illness Index ,Prospective Studies ,Middle Aged ,United States ,Female ,Male ,Symptom Assessment ,Symptom Flare Up ,Correlation of Data ,COPD ,acute exacerbation of chronic bronchitis ,antiplatelet drugs ,dyspnea ,quality of life ,Lung ,Clinical Research ,Rehabilitation ,Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease ,Respiratory ,Good Health and Well Being ,Clinical Sciences ,Respiratory System - Abstract
BackgroundAspirin use in COPD has been associated with reduced all-cause mortality in meta-regression analysis with few equivocal studies. However, the effect of aspirin on COPD morbidity is unknown.MethodsSelf-reported daily aspirin use was obtained at baseline from SPIROMICS participants with COPD (FEV1/FVC < 70%). Acute exacerbations of COPD (AECOPD) were prospectively ascertained through quarterly structured telephone questionnaires up to 3 years and categorized as moderate (symptoms treated with antibiotics or oral corticosteroids) or severe (requiring ED visit or hospitalization). Aspirin users were matched one-to-one with nonusers, based on propensity score. The association of aspirin use with total, moderate, and severe AECOPD was investigated using zero-inflated negative binomial models. Linear or logistic regression was used to investigate the association with baseline respiratory symptoms, quality of life, and exercise tolerance.ResultsAmong 1,698 participants, 45% reported daily aspirin use at baseline. Propensity score matching resulted in 503 participant pairs. Aspirin users had a lower incidence rate of total AECOPD (adjusted incidence rate ratio [IRR], 0.78; 95% CI, 0.65-0.94), with similar effect for moderate but not severe AECOPD (IRR, 0.86; 95% CI, 0.63-1.18). Aspirin use was associated with lower total St. George's Respiratory Questionnaire score (β, -2.2; 95% CI, -4.1 to -0.4), reduced odds of moderate-severe dyspnea (modified Medical Research Council questionnaire score ≥ 2; adjusted odds ratio, 0.69; 95% CI, 0.51-0.93), and COPD Assessment Test score (β, -1.1; 95% CI, -1.9 to -0.2) but not 6-min walk distance (β, 0.7 m; 95% CI, -14.3 to 15.6).ConclusionsDaily aspirin use is associated with reduced rate of COPD exacerbations, less dyspnea, and better quality of life. Randomized clinical trials of aspirin use in COPD are warranted to account for unmeasured and residual confounding.Trial registryClinicalTrials.gov; No.: NCT01969344; URL: www.clinicaltrials.gov.
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- 2019
39. Towards the elimination of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease: a Lancet Commission
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Stolz, Daiana, Mkorombindo, Takudzwa, Schumann, Desiree M, Agusti, Alvar, Ash, Samuel Y, Bafadhel, Mona, Bai, Chunxue, Chalmers, James D, Criner, Gerard J, Dharmage, Shyamali C, Franssen, Frits M E, Frey, Urs, Han, MeiLan, Hansel, Nadia N, Hawkins, Nathaniel M, Kalhan, Ravi, Konigshoff, Melanie, Ko, Fanny W, Parekh, Trisha M, Powell, Pippa, Rutten-van Mölken, Maureen, Simpson, Jodie, Sin, Don D, Song, Yuanlin, Suki, Bela, Troosters, Thierry, Washko, George R, Welte, Tobias, and Dransfield, Mark T
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- 2022
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40. Quality Standard Position Statements for Health System Policy Changes in Diagnosis and Management of COPD: A Global Perspective
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Bhutani, Mohit, Price, David B., Winders, Tonya A., Worth, Heinrich, Gruffydd-Jones, Kevin, Tal-Singer, Ruth, Correia-de-Sousa, Jaime, Dransfield, Mark T., Peché, Rudi, Stolz, Daiana, and Hurst, John R.
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- 2022
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41. Identification of Sputum Biomarkers Predictive of Pulmonary Exacerbations in COPD
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Alexis, Neil E., Anderson, Wayne H., Arjomandi, Mehrdad, Barjaktarevic, Igor, Barr, R. Graham, Bateman, Lori A., Bhatt, Surya P., Bleecker, Eugene R., Boucher, Richard C., Bowler, Russell P., Christenson, Stephanie A., Comellas, Alejandro P., Cooper, Christopher B., Couper, David J., Criner, Gerard J., Crystal, Ronald G., Curtis, Jeffrey L., Doerschuk, Claire M., Dransfield, Mark T., Drummond, Brad, Freeman, Christine M., Galban, Craig, Han, MeiLan K., Hansel, Nadia N., Hastie, Annette T., Hoffman, Eric A., Huang, Yvonne, Kaner, Robert J., Kanner, Richard E., Kleerup, Eric C., Krishnan, Jerry A., LaVange, Lisa M., Lazarus, Stephen C., Martinez, Fernando J., Meyers, Deborah A., Moore, Wendy C., Newell, John D., Jr., Paine, Robert, III, Paulin, Laura, Peters, Stephen P., Pirozzi, Cheryl, Putcha, Nirupama, Oelsner, Elizabeth C., O’Neal, Wanda K., Ortega, Victor E., Raman, Sanjeev, Rennard, Stephen I., Tashkin, Donald P., Wells, J. Michael, Wise, Robert A., Woodruff, Prescott G., Esther, Charles R., Jr., Kesimer, Mehmet, Ceppe, Agathe, Tesfaigzi, Yohannes, Kim, Victor, Paulin, Laura M., Huang, Yvonne J., and Labaki, Wassim W.
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- 2022
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42. Chronotropic index during 6-minute walk and acute respiratory events in COPDGene
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Macdonald, David M., Palzer, Elise F., Abbasi, Asghar, Baldomero, Arianne K., Bhatt, Surya P., Casaburi, Richard, Connett, John E., Dransfield, Mark T., Gaeckle, Nathaniel T., Mkorombindo, Takudzwa, Rossiter, Harry B., Stringer, William W., Tiller, Nicholas B., Wendt, Chris H., Zhao, Dongxing, and Kunisaki, Ken M.
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- 2022
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43. Longitudinal Association Between Muscle Loss and Mortality in Ever Smokers
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Crapo, James D., Silverman, Edwin K., Cummings, Sara, Madden, Kelley, Make, Barry J., Nabbosa, Juliet, Port, Emily, Rashdi, Serine, Regan, Elizabeth A., Stepp, Lori, Watts, Shandi, Weaver, Michael, Beaty, Terri, Bowler, Russell P., Curtis, Jeffrey L., Han, MeiLan K., Hokanson, John E., Lynch, David A., Strand, Matthew J., Anderson, Gary, Bleecker, Eugene R., Coxson, Harvey O., Crystal, Ronald G., Hogg, James C., Province, Michael A., Rennard, Stephen I., Croxton, Thomas, Gan, Weiniu, Postow, Lisa A., Viviano, Lisa M., Costa-Davis, Corinne, Malanga, Elisha, Prieto, Delia, Tal-Singer, Ruth, Farzadegan, Homayoon, Hadji, Akila, Sathe, Leena, Baraghoshi, David, Chen, Grace, Crooks, James, Knowles, Ruthie, Pratte, Katherine, Wilson, Carla, Zelarney, Pearlanne T., Kechris, Katerina J., Leach, Sonia, Austin, Erin E., Czizik, Annika, Kinney, Gregory, Li, Yisha, Lutz, Sharon M., Ragland, Margaret F., Richmond, Nicole, Young, Kendra A., Cho, Michael, Castaldi, Peter J., Glass, Kimberly, Hersh, Craig, Kim, Wonji, Liu, Yang-Yu, Hersh, Craig P., Bidinger, Jacqueline, Cho, Michael H., Conrad, Douglas, DeMeo, Dawn L., El-Boueiz, Adel R., Foreman, Marilyn G., Ghosh, Auyon, Hahn, Georg, Hansel, Nadia N., Hayden, Lystra P., Hobbs, Brian, Kim, Woori, Lange, Christoph, McDonald, Merry- Lynn, McGeachie, Michael, Moll, Matthew, Morris, Melody, Patsopoulos, Nikolaos A., Qiao, Dandi, Ruczinski, Ingo, Wan, Emily S., Dy, Jennifer G., Fain, Sean B., Ginsburg, Shoshana, Hoffman, Eric A., Humphries, Stephen, Judy, Philip F., Stefanie Mason, Alex Kluiber, Oh, Andrea, Poynton, Clare, Reinhardt, Joseph M., Ross, James, San Jose Estepar, Raul, Schroeder, Joyce D., Sitek, Arkadiusz, Steiner, Robert M., van Beek, Edwin, Ginneken, Bram van, van Rikxoort, Eva, Washko, George R., Jensen, Robert, John E. Hokanson, Co-Chair, Bhatt, Surya P., Casaburi, Richard, Kim, Victor, Putcha, Nirupama, Han, MeiLan, Bon, Jessica, Diaz, Alejandro A., Regan, Elizabeth, Anzueto, Antonio, Bailey, William C., Criner, Gerard J., Dransfield, Mark T., Kinney, Greg, Sprenger, Kim, Benos, Takis, Hanania, Nicola A., Hoth, Karin F., Lambert, Allison, Lowe, Katherine, Oates, Gabriela, Parekh, Trisha, Westney, Gloria, Young, Kendra, Balasubramanian, Aparna, Boriek, Aladin, Fawzy, Ashraf, Jacobson, Francine, LaFon, David C., MacIntyre, Neil, Maselli-Caceres, Diego, McCormack, Meredith C., McDonald, Merry-Lynn, Sciurba, Frank, Soler, Xavier, Tejwani, Vickram, van Beek, Edwin JR., Wade, Raymond C., Wells, Mike, Wendt, Chris H., Yun, Jeong H., Zhang, Jingzhou, Gillenwater, Lucas, Lowe, Katherine E., Pratte, Katherine A., Ragland, Margaret, Attaway, Amy, Mason, Stefanie, Rossiter, Harry B., Saha, Punam Kumar, Wilson, Ava, Amaza, Hannatu, Baldomero, Adrienne, Mamary, A. James, O’Brien, James, Wise, Robert A., Eakin, Michelle, Fiedorowicz, Jess G., Henkle, Ben, Holm, Kristen, Iyer, Anand, Kunisaki, Ken M., McEvoy, Charlene, Mkorombindo, Takudzwa, Shinozaki, Gen, Yohannes, Abebaw, Hobbs, Brian D., Miller, Bruce E., Retson, Tara, McCloskey, Lisa, Pernicano, Perry G., Atik, Mustafa, Bertrand, Laura, Monaco, Thomas, Narendra, Dharani, Lenge de Rosen, Veronica V., Badu-Danso, Kwame, Jacobson, Francine L., Kaufman, Laura, Maguire, Cherie, Struble, Sophie, Wilson, Seth, Barr, R. Graham, Almonte, Casandra, Austin, John H.M., Gomez Blum, Maria Lorena, D’Souza, Belinda M., Florez, Emilay, Martinez, Rodney, MacIntyre, Neil, Jr., Curry, Wendy, McAdams, H. Page, Reikofski, Charlotte V., Washington, Lacey, Brown, Robert, Clare, Cheryl, Daniel, Marie, Horton, Karen, Ting “Tony” Lin, Cheng, Mirza, Tahira, Scott, Meagan, Shade, Becky, Budoff, Matt, Calmelat, Robert, Cavanaugh, Deborah, Dailing, Chris, Diaz, Leticia, Fischer, Hans, Indelicato, Renee Love, Porszasz, Janos, Soriano, April, Stringer, William, Urrutia, Miriam, Baldomero, Arianne, Bell, Brian, Deconcini, Miranda, Loes, Linda, Phelan, Jonathan, Robichaux, Camille, Sasse, Cheryl, Tashjian, Joseph H., Flenaugh, Eric L., Abson, Kema, Gebrekristos, Hirut, Johnson, Priscilla, Jordan, Jessica, Ponce, Mario, Terpenning, Silanath, Wilson, Derrick, Broadhurst, Grace, Dyer, Debra, Engel, Elena, Finigan, Jay, Hill, Andrew, Jones, Alex, Jones, Ryan, Owen, Jordan, Rosiello, Richard, Andries, Nicole, Charpentier, Mary, Kirk, Diane, Pace, David, Ciccolella, David, Cordova, Francis, Dass, Chandra, D’Alonzo, Gilbert, Davis, Valena, Desai, Parag, Fehrle, Dee, Grabianowski, Carla, Jacobs, Michael, Jameson, Laurie, Jones, Gayle M., Kelsen, Steven, Marchetti, Nathaniel, McGonagle, Francine, Satti, Aditi, Shenoy, Kartik, Sheridan, Regina, Vega-Sanchez, Maria, Wallace, Samantha, Akinseye-kolapo, Samuel, Baker, Matthew, Goggins, Arnissa, McClain, Anny, Nath, Hrudaya, Singh, Satinder P., Sonavane, Sushil K., Westfall, Elizabeth, Gil, Marissa, El Hajjaoui, Tarek, Hsiao, Albert, Martineau, Amber, Mielke, Jenna, Perez, Karl, Querido, Gabriel, Reston, Tara, Yen, Andrew, Comellas, Alejandro, Fortis, Spyridon, Galizia, Mauricio, Garcia, Eric, Keating, Janet, Laroia, Archana, Lee, Changhyun, Meyer, Amber, Mullan, Brian, Nagpal, Prashant, Ofori, Oloigbe, Suiter, Sierra, Mason, Stefanie E., Moreta-Martinez, Rafael, Labaki, Wassim W., San Jose Estepar, Ruben, Make, Barry, and Stringer, Kathleen
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- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Alignment of Inhaled Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease Therapies with Published Strategies. Analysis of the Global Initiative for Chronic Obstructive Lung Disease Recommendations in SPIROMICS.
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Ghosh, Sohini, Anderson, Wayne H, Putcha, Nirupama, Han, Meilan K, Curtis, Jeffrey L, Criner, Gerard J, Dransfield, Mark T, Barr, R Graham, Krishnan, Jerry A, Lazarus, Stephen C, Cooper, Christopher B, Paine, Robert, Peters, Stephen P, Hansel, Nadia N, Martinez, Fernando J, Drummond, M Bradley, and Current and former investigators of the SPIROMICS sites and reading centers
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Current and former investigators of the SPIROMICS sites and reading centers ,Humans ,Pulmonary Disease ,Chronic Obstructive ,Disease Progression ,Adrenal Cortex Hormones ,Muscarinic Antagonists ,Bronchodilator Agents ,Forced Expiratory Volume ,Drug Therapy ,Combination ,Administration ,Inhalation ,Cohort Studies ,Patient Compliance ,Aged ,Middle Aged ,Guideline Adherence ,Female ,Male ,Adrenergic beta-2 Receptor Agonists ,chronic obstructive pulmonary disease ,inhaled therapy ,treatment ,Lung ,Rare Diseases ,Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease ,Orphan Drug ,Evaluation of treatments and therapeutic interventions ,6.1 Pharmaceuticals ,Respiratory - Abstract
RationaleDespite awareness of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) treatment recommendations, uptake is poor. The Subpopulations and Intermediate Outcome Measures in COPD Study (SPIROMICS) spans 2010-2016, providing an opportunity to assess integration of 2011 Global Initiative for Obstructive Lung Disease (GOLD) treatment strategies over time in a large observational cohort study.ObjectivesTo evaluate how COPD treatment aligns with 2011 GOLD strategies and determine factors associated with failure to align with recommendations.MethodsInformation on inhaled medication use collected via questionnaire annually for 4 years was compiled into therapeutic classes (long-acting antimuscarinic agent, long-acting β-agonist, inhaled corticosteroids [ICS], and combinations thereof). Medications were not modified by SPIROMICS investigators. 2011 GOLD COPD categories A, B, C, and D were assigned. Alignment of inhaler regimen with first-/second-line GOLD recommendations was determined, stratifying into recommendation aligned or nonaligned. Recommendation-nonaligned participants were further stratified into overuse and underuse categories.ResultsOf 1,721 participants with COPD, at baseline, 52% of regimens aligned with GOLD recommendations. Among participants with nonaligned regimens, 46% reported underuse, predominately owing to lack of long-acting inhalers in GOLD category D. Of the 54% reporting overuse, 95% were treated with nonindicated ICS-containing regimens. Among 431 participants with 4 years of follow-up data, recommendation alignment did not change over time. When we compared 2011 and 2017 recommendations, we found that 47% did not align with either set of recommendations, whereas 35% were in alignment with both recommendations.ConclusionsAmong SPIROMICS participants with COPD, nearly 50% reported inhaler regimens that did not align with GOLD recommendations. Nonalignment was driven largely by overuse of ICS regimens in milder disease and lack of long-acting inhalers in severe disease.
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- 2019
45. Centrilobular emphysema and coronary artery calcification: mediation analysis in the SPIROMICS cohort.
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Bhatt, Surya P, Nath, Hrudaya P, Kim, Young-Il, Ramachandran, Rekha, Watts, Jubal R, Terry, Nina LJ, Sonavane, Sushil, Deshmane, Swati P, Woodruff, Prescott G, Oelsner, Elizabeth C, Bodduluri, Sandeep, Han, MeiLan K, Labaki, Wassim W, Michael Wells, J, Martinez, Fernando J, Barr, R Graham, Dransfield, Mark T, and SPIROMICS investigators
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SPIROMICS investigators ,Humans ,Pulmonary Disease ,Chronic Obstructive ,Pulmonary Emphysema ,Inflammation Mediators ,Vital Capacity ,Cohort Studies ,Smoking ,Aged ,Middle Aged ,Female ,Male ,Coronary Artery Disease ,Vascular Calcification ,Biomarkers ,Outcome Assessment ,Health Care ,COPD ,Cardiovascular disease ,Coronary artery calcification ,Emphysema ,Mediators ,Pulmonary Disease ,Chronic Obstructive ,Outcome Assessment ,Health Care ,Respiratory System ,Cardiorespiratory Medicine and Haematology ,Clinical Sciences - Abstract
BACKGROUND:Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) is associated with a two-to-five fold increase in the risk of coronary artery disease independent of shared risk factors. This association is hypothesized to be mediated by systemic inflammation but this link has not been established. METHODS:We included 300 participants enrolled in the SPIROMICS cohort, 75 each of lifetime non-smokers, smokers without airflow obstruction, mild-moderate COPD, and severe-very severe COPD. We quantified emphysema and airway disease on computed tomography, characterized visual emphysema subtypes (centrilobular and paraseptal) and airway disease, and used the Weston visual score to quantify coronary artery calcification (CAC). We used the Sobel test to determine whether markers of systemic inflammation mediated a link between spirometric and radiographic features of COPD and CAC. RESULTS:FEV1/FVC but not quantitative emphysema or airway wall thickening was associated with CAC (p = 0.036), after adjustment for demographics, diabetes mellitus, hypertension, statin use, and CT scanner type. To explain this discordance, we examined visual subtypes of emphysema and airway disease, and found that centrilobular emphysema but not paraseptal emphysema or bronchial thickening was independently associated with CAC (p = 0.019). MMP3, VCAM1, CXCL5 and CXCL9 mediated 8, 8, 7 and 16% of the association between FEV1/FVC and CAC, respectively. Similar biomarkers partially mediated the association between centrilobular emphysema and CAC. CONCLUSIONS:The association between airflow obstruction and coronary calcification is driven primarily by the centrilobular subtype of emphysema, and is linked through bioactive molecules implicated in the pathogenesis of atherosclerosis. TRIAL REGISTRATION:ClinicalTrials.gov: Identifier: NCT01969344 .
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- 2018
46. Genome-wide association study of lung function and clinical implication in heavy smokers
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Li, Xingnan, Ortega, Victor E, Ampleford, Elizabeth J, Graham Barr, R, Christenson, Stephanie A, Cooper, Christopher B, Couper, David, Dransfield, Mark T, Han, Mei Lan K, Hansel, Nadia N, Hoffman, Eric A, Kanner, Richard E, Kleerup, Eric C, Martinez, Fernando J, Paine, Robert, Woodruff, Prescott G, Hawkins, Gregory A, Bleecker, Eugene R, Meyers, Deborah A, and for the SPIROMICS Research Group
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Biological Sciences ,Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Genetics ,Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease ,Clinical Research ,Lung ,Prevention ,Tobacco ,Tobacco Smoke and Health ,Human Genome ,Aetiology ,2.1 Biological and endogenous factors ,Respiratory ,Aged ,Female ,Genetic Loci ,Genome-Wide Association Study ,Genotype ,Humans ,Longitudinal Studies ,Male ,Middle Aged ,Polymorphism ,Single Nucleotide ,Prospective Studies ,Pulmonary Disease ,Chronic Obstructive ,Respiratory Function Tests ,Smokers ,Smoking ,White People ,alpha 1-Antitrypsin ,COPD ,GWAS ,Lung function ,rs28929474 ,SERPINA1 ,SPIROMICS ,SPIROMICS Research Group ,Clinical Sciences ,Genetics & Heredity ,Clinical sciences - Abstract
BackgroundThe aim of this study is to identify genetic loci associated with post-bronchodilator FEV1/FVC and FEV1, and develop a multi-gene predictive model for lung function in COPD.MethodsGenome-wide association study (GWAS) of post-bronchodilator FEV1/FVC and FEV1 was performed in 1645 non-Hispanic White European descent smokers.ResultsA functional rare variant in SERPINA1 (rs28929474: Glu342Lys) was significantly associated with post-bronchodilator FEV1/FVC (p = 1.2 × 10- 8) and FEV1 (p = 2.1 × 10- 9). In addition, this variant was associated with COPD (OR = 2.3; p = 7.8 × 10- 4) and severity (OR = 4.1; p = 0.0036). Heterozygous subjects (CT genotype) had significantly lower lung function and higher percentage of COPD and more severe COPD than subjects with the CC genotype. 8.6% of the variance of post-bronchodilator FEV1/FVC can be explained by SNPs in 10 genes with age, sex, and pack-years of cigarette smoking (P
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- 2018
47. New Spirometry Indices for Detecting Mild Airflow Obstruction.
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Bhatt, Surya P, Bhakta, Nirav R, Wilson, Carla G, Cooper, Christopher B, Barjaktarevic, Igor, Bodduluri, Sandeep, Kim, Young-Il, Eberlein, Michael, Woodruff, Prescott G, Sciurba, Frank C, Castaldi, Peter J, Han, MeiLan K, Dransfield, Mark T, and Nakhmani, Arie
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Humans ,Pulmonary Disease ,Chronic Obstructive ,Airway Obstruction ,Tomography ,X-Ray Computed ,Respiratory Function Tests ,Vital Capacity ,Forced Expiratory Volume ,Spirometry ,Prognosis ,Severity of Illness Index ,Odds Ratio ,Comorbidity ,Image Processing ,Computer-Assisted ,Aged ,Middle Aged ,Female ,Male ,Pulmonary Disease ,Chronic Obstructive ,Tomography ,X-Ray Computed ,Image Processing ,Computer-Assisted - Abstract
The diagnosis of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) relies on demonstration of airflow obstruction. Traditional spirometric indices miss a number of subjects with respiratory symptoms or structural lung disease on imaging. We hypothesized that utilizing all data points on the expiratory spirometry curves to assess their shape will improve detection of mild airflow obstruction and structural lung disease. We analyzed spirometry data of 8307 participants enrolled in the COPDGene study, and derived metrics of airflow obstruction based on the shape on the volume-time (Parameter D), and flow-volume curves (Transition Point and Transition Distance). We tested associations of these parameters with CT measures of lung disease, respiratory morbidity, and mortality using regression analyses. There were significant correlations between FEV1/FVC with Parameter D (r = -0.83; p
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- 2018
48. Visual Estimate of Coronary Artery Calcium Predicts Cardiovascular Disease in COPD
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Bhatt, Surya P, Kazerooni, Ella A, Newell, John D, Hokanson, John E, Budoff, Matthew J, Dass, Chandra A, Martinez, Carlos H, Bodduluri, Sandeep, Jacobson, Francine L, Yen, Andrew, Dransfield, Mark T, Fuhrman, Carl, Nath, Hrudaya, and Investigators, COPDGene
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Cardiovascular Medicine and Haematology ,Clinical Sciences ,Prevention ,Clinical Research ,Atherosclerosis ,Lung ,Cardiovascular ,Heart Disease - Coronary Heart Disease ,Tobacco ,Biomedical Imaging ,Tobacco Smoke and Health ,Heart Disease ,Aging ,Women's Health ,Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease ,4.2 Evaluation of markers and technologies ,Respiratory ,Aged ,Calcinosis ,Cardiovascular Diseases ,Coronary Vessels ,Female ,Follow-Up Studies ,Humans ,Longitudinal Studies ,Male ,Middle Aged ,Predictive Value of Tests ,Prognosis ,Pulmonary Disease ,Chronic Obstructive ,Risk Factors ,Smokers ,Tomography ,X-Ray Computed ,cardiovascular disease ,COPD ,coronary calcification ,COPDGene Investigators ,Respiratory System ,Cardiovascular medicine and haematology ,Clinical sciences - Abstract
BackgroundCOPD is associated with cardiovascular disease (CVD), and coronary artery calcification (CAC) provides additional prognostic information. With increasing use of nongated CT scans in clinical practice, this study hypothesized that the visual Weston CAC score would perform as well as the Agatston score in predicting prevalent and incident coronary artery disease (CAD) and CVD in COPD.MethodsCAC was measured by using Agatston and Weston scores on baseline CT scans in 1,875 current and former smokers enrolled in the Genetic Epidemiology of COPD (COPDGene) study. Baseline cardiovascular disease and incident cardiac events on longitudinal follow-up were recorded. Accuracy of the CAC scores was measured by using receiver-operating characteristic analysis, and Cox proportional hazards analyses were used to estimate the risk of incident cardiac events.ResultsCAD was reported by 133 (7.1%) subjects at baseline. A total of 413 (22.0%) and 241 (12.9%) patients had significant CAC according to the Weston (≥ 7) and Agatston (≥ 400) scores, respectively; the two methods were significantly correlated (r = 0.84; P < .001). Over 5 years of follow-up, 127 patients (6.8%) developed incident CVD. For predicting prevalent CAD, c-indices for the Weston and Agatston scores were 0.78 and 0.74 and for predicting incident CVD, they were 0.62 and 0.61. After adjustment for age, race, sex, smoking pack-years, FEV1, percent emphysema, and CT scanner type, a Weston score ≥ 7 was associated with time to first acute coronary event (hazard ratio, 2.16 [95% CI, 1.32 to 3.53]; P = .002), but a Agatston score ≥ 400 was not (hazard ratio, 1.75 [95% CI, 0.99-3.09]; P = .053).ConclusionsA simple visual score for CAC performed well in predicting incident CAD in smokers with and without COPD.Trial registryClinicalTrials.gov; No.: NCT00608764; URL: www.clinicaltrials.gov.
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- 2018
49. Rural Residence and Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease Exacerbations. Analysis of the SPIROMICS Cohort
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Burkes, Robert M, Gassett, Amanda J, Ceppe, Agathe S, Anderson, Wayne, O’Neal, Wanda K, Woodruff, Prescott G, Krishnan, Jerry A, Barr, R Graham, Han, MeiLan K, Martinez, Fernando J, Comellas, Alejandro P, Lambert, Allison A, Kaufman, Joel D, Dransfield, Mark T, Wells, J Michael, Kanner, Richard E, Paine, Robert, Bleecker, Eugene R, Paulin, Laura M, Hansel, Nadia N, Drummond, M Bradley, Alexis, Neil E, Anderson, Wayne H, Boucher, Richard C, Bowler, Russell P, Carretta, Elizabeth E, Christenson, Stephanie A, Cooper, Christopher B, Couper, David J, Criner, Gerard J, Crystal, Ronald G, Curtis, Jeffrey L, Doerschuk, Claire M, Freeman, Christine M, Hastie, Annette T, Hoffman, Eric A, Kaner, Robert J, Kleerup, Eric C, LaVange, Lisa M, Lazarus, Stephen C, Meyers, Deborah A, Moore, Wendy C, Newell, John D, Paulin, Laura, Peters, Stephen, Oelsner, Elizabeth C, Ortega, Victor E, Putcha, Nirupama, Rennard, Stephen I, Tashkin, Donald P, Scholand, Mary Beth, Wise, Robert A, Postow, Lisa, and Croxton, Thomas
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Sciences ,Lung ,Rural Health ,Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease ,Clinical Research ,Respiratory ,chronic obstructive pulmonary disease ,exacerbation ,rural health ,Current and former investigators of the SPIROMICS sites and reading centers ,Cardiovascular medicine and haematology ,Clinical sciences - Abstract
Rationale: Rural residence is associated with poor outcomes in several chronic diseases. The association between rural residence and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) exacerbations remains unclear.Objectives: In this work, we sought to determine the independent association between rural residence and COPD-related outcomes, including COPD exacerbations, airflow obstruction, and symptom burden.Methods: A total of 1,684 SPIROMICS (Subpopulations and Intermediate Outcome Measures in COPD Study) participants with forced expiratory volume in 1 second/forced vital capacity < 0.70 had geocoding-defined rural-urban residence status determined (N = 204 rural and N = 1,480 urban). Univariate and multivariate logistic and negative binomial regressions were performed to assess the independent association between rurality and COPD outcomes, including exacerbations, lung function, and symptom burden. The primary exposure of interest was rural residence, determined by geocoding of the home address to the block level at the time of study enrollment. Additional covariates of interest included demographic and clinical characteristics, occupation, and occupational exposures. The primary outcome measures were exacerbations determined over a 1-year course after enrollment by quarterly telephone calls and at an annual research clinic visit. The odds ratio (OR) and incidence rate ratio (IRR) of exacerbations that required treatment with medications, including steroids or antibiotics (total exacerbations), and exacerbations leading to hospitalization (severe exacerbations) were determined after adjusting for relevant covariates.Results: Rural residence was independently associated with a 70% increase in the odds of total exacerbations (OR, 1.70 [95% confidence interval (CI), 1.13-2.56]; P = 0.012) and a 46% higher incidence rate of total exacerbations (IRR 1.46 [95% CI, 1.02-2.10]; P = 0.039). There was no association between rural residence and severe exacerbations. Agricultural occupation was independently associated with increased odds and incidence of total and severe exacerbations. Inclusion of agricultural occupation in the analysis attenuated the association between rural residence and the odds and incidence rate of total exacerbations (OR, 1.52 [95% CI, 1.00-2.32]; P = 0.05 and IRR 1.39 [95% CI, 0.97-1.99]; P = 0.07). There was no difference in symptoms or airflow obstruction between rural and urban participants.Conclusions: Rural residence is independently associated with increased odds and incidence of total, but not severe, COPD exacerbations. These associations are not fully explained by agriculture-related exposures, highlighting the need for future research into potential mechanisms of the increased risk of COPD exacerbations in the rural population.
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- 2018
50. Simultaneous LC–MS/MS analysis of eicosanoids and related metabolites in human serum, sputum and BALF
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Thakare, Rhishikesh, Chhonker, Yashpal S, Gautam, Nagsen, Nelson, Amy, Casaburi, Richard, Criner, Gerard, Dransfield, Mark T, Make, Barry, Schmid, Kendra K, Rennard, Stephen I, and Alnouti, Yazen
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Medical Biochemistry and Metabolomics ,Analytical Chemistry ,Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Chemical Sciences ,Clinical Research ,Bronchoalveolar Lavage Fluid ,Chromatography ,Liquid ,Eicosanoids ,Humans ,Limit of Detection ,Linear Models ,Reproducibility of Results ,Sputum ,Tandem Mass Spectrometry ,biomarker ,COPD ,eicosanoids ,LC-MS ,MS ,LC-MS/MS ,Pharmacology and Pharmaceutical Sciences ,Pharmacology and pharmaceutical sciences ,Analytical chemistry - Abstract
The differences among individual eicosanoids in eliciting different physiological and pathological responses are largely unknown because of the lack of valid and simple analytical methods for the quantification of individual eicosanoids and their metabolites in serum, sputum and bronchial alveolar lavage fluid (BALF). Therefore, a simple and sensitive LC-MS/MS method for the simultaneous quantification of 34 eicosanoids in human serum, sputum and BALF was developed and validated. This method is valid and sensitive with a limit of quantification ranging from 0.2 to 3 ng/mL for the various analytes, and has a large dynamic range (500 ng/mL) and a short run time (25 min). The intra- and inter-day accuracy and precision values met the acceptance criteria according to US Food and Drug Administration guidelines. Using this method, detailed eicosanoid profiles were quantified in serum, sputum and BALF from a pilot human study. In summary, a reliable and simple LC-MS/MS method to quantify major eicosanoids and their metabolites was developed and applied to quantify eicosanoids in human various fluids, demonstrating its suitability to assess eicosanoid biomarkers in human clinical trials.
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- 2018
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