Abstract

BackgroundThe characteristics and natural history of GOLD B COPD patients are not well described. The clinical characteristics and natural history of GOLD B patients over 1 year in a multicentre cohort of COPD patients in the COPDMAP study were assessed. We aimed to identify the subgroup of patients who progressed to GOLD D (unstable GOLD B patients) and identify characteristics associated with progression.MethodsThree hundred seventy COPD patients were assessed at baseline and 12 months thereafter. Demographics, lung function, health status, 6 min walk tests and levels of systemic inflammation were assessed. Students t tests and Mann Whitney-U tests were used.ResultsOne hundred seven (28.9%) of patients were categorised as GOLD B at baseline. These GOLD B patients had similar FEV1 to GOLD A patients (66% predicted). More GOLD B patients were current smokers (p = 0.031), had chronic bronchitis (p = 0.0003) and cardiovascular comorbidities (p = 0.019) compared to GOLD A. At 12 months, 25.3% of GOLD B patients progressed to GOLD D. These patients who progressed (unstable patients) had worse health status and symptoms (SGRQ-C Total, 50.0 v 41.1, p = 0.019 and CAT, 21.0 v 14.0, p = 0.006) and lower FEV1 (60% v 69% p = 0.014) at baseline compared to stable patients who remained in GOLD B.ConclusionsUnstable GOLD B patients who progressed to GOLD D had a higher level of symptoms at baseline. A high symptom burden may predict an increased likelihood of disease progression in GOLD B patients.

Highlights

  • The characteristics and natural history of Global Initiative for Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (GOLD) B Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) patients are not well described

  • We studied the stability of group B patients over 1 year, and describe the clinical characteristics of GOLD B patients who progressed to higher risk GOLD categories

  • There were 19 unstable GOLD B patients (25.3%) who progressed to GOLD D; 8 patients due to a decline in Forced Expiratory Volume in 1 s (FEV1), 10 patients due to an increase in exacerbation risk, and 1 subject displayed both of these characteristics

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Summary

Introduction

The characteristics and natural history of GOLD B COPD patients are not well described. The clinical characteristics and natural history of GOLD B patients over 1 year in a multicentre cohort of COPD patients in the COPDMAP study were assessed. Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) is a heterogeneous condition, comprising different clinical and pathophysiological features that vary in both presence and severity between patients [1]. The Global Initiative for Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (GOLD) recommends a combined assessment to stratify patients into one of four categories (A/B/C/D) based on the severity of airflow limitation, degree of symptoms and exacerbation risk [1]. Patients with more symptoms are allocated into groups B or D and patients with high exacerbation risk. GOLD B patients are defined by mild to moderate airflow obstruction (FEV1 > 50%), a low exacerbation rate (

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