Abstract

Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) is a complex disease that is predicted to be the third most common cause of death by 2030. In Canada, the care and management of chronic conditions is largely provided by primary care providers. Although there is emerging research and initiatives that describe the prevalence of COPD in Canadian primary care settings, to our knowledge, there have been no efforts to use a large pan-Canadian database to analyze COPD as a risk factor for other common chronic conditions managed in primary care. We report the risk of developing comorbidities after the onset of COPD, that is, the extent to which COPD is a risk factor for developing common chronic conditions (heart failure, depression, anxiety, coronary artery disease, diabetes, anemia, hypertension, ischemic heart disease, underweight, and osteoporosis). After adjusting for age, sex, urban vs rural residence, and smoking status, the relative risks for patients with COPD at baseline were significantly higher for subsequent incidence of anemia, anxiety, diabetes, depression, heart failure, ischemic heart disease, lung cancer, osteoporosis, sleep apnea, underweight, and hypertension than patients without COPD. Using a cut-point of a 200% increase in relative risk as indicative of particular clinical relevance, COPD has a statistically and clinically significant association with developing lung cancer, becoming underweight, and developing heart failure.

Highlights

  • Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) is a common condition worldwide[1,2]

  • Conditions selected for study had to have been reported as being associated with COPD and available for analysis in the Canadian Primary Care Sentinel Surveillance Network (CPCSSN) dataset

  • Male sex, and smoking were significantly more common in patients with COPD at baseline compared to patients without COPD at baseline (p < 0.001)

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

In Canada, it is more common in men than women and has a prevalence estimate in patients over the age of 40 years of approximately 6%3,4. It is associated with a variety of comorbidities[5] that have an adverse effect on mortality and direct and indirect health care costs[6,7,8]. Conditions selected for study had to have been reported as being associated with COPD and available for analysis in the Canadian Primary Care Sentinel Surveillance Network (CPCSSN) dataset. “frailty” is often reported as being associated with COPD; CPCSSN does not have a valid frailty definition and the condition was not included in this analysis

RESULTS
Study design
Cave et al 3
Study limitations
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