Abstract

Background Acute bronchodilator responsiveness is an area of discussion in COPD. No information exists regarding this aspect of the disease from an unselected COPD population. We assessed acute bronchodilator responsiveness and factors influencing it in subjects with and without airway obstruction in an epidemiologic sample. Methods COPD was defined by GOLD criteria (post-bronchodilator FEV 1/FVC < 0.70). In this analysis, subjects with pre-bronchodilator FEV 1/FVC <0.70 but ≥0.70 post-bronchodilator were considered to have reversible obstruction. Bronchodilator responsiveness after albuterol 200 μg was assessed using three definitions: a) FVC and/or FEV 1 increment ≥12% plus ≥200 mL over baseline; b) FEV 1 ≥ 15% increase over baseline; and c) FEV 1 increase ≥10% of predicted value. Results There were 756 healthy respiratory subjects, 481 subjects with reversible obstruction and 759 COPD subjects. Depending on the criterion used the proportion of person with acute bronchodilator responsiveness ranged between 15.0–28.2% in COPD, 11.4–21.6% in reversible obstructed and 2.7–7.2% in respiratory healthy. FEV 1 changes were lower (110.6 ± 7.40 vs. 164.7 ± 11.8 mL) and FVC higher (146.5 ± 14.2 mL vs. −131.0 ± 19.6 mL) in COPD subjects compared with reversible obstructed. Substantial overlap in FEV 1 and FVC changes was observed among the groups. Acute bronchodilator responsiveness in COPD persons was associated with less obstruction and never smoking. Conclusions Over two-thirds of persons with COPD did not demonstrate acute bronchodilator responsiveness. The overall response was small and less than that considered as significant by ATS criteria. The overlap in FEV 1 and FVC changes after bronchodilator among the groups makes it difficult to determine a threshold for separating them.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call