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Department of Public
Health Sciences, St George's Hospital Medical School, London
SW17 0RE, UK
Correspondence to: Professor D P Strachan email: d.strachan{at}sghms.ac.uk
Received 7 December 1999; Returned to authors 21 February 2000; Revised version received 26 May 2000; Accepted for publication 12 June 2000
BACKGROUND
Previous
epidemiological studies have related mortality from chronic obstructive
pulmonary disease (COPD) to forced expiratory volumes (FEV1
or FEV0.75) and it is unknown whether other spirometric indices might have greater predictive power.
METHODS
A case-control
study of fatal COPD was conducted within a cohort of London civil
servants who performed forced expiratory spirograms in 1967-9 and were
followed up for mortality over 20 years. The spirograms of 143 men who
died of COPD (ICD8 491, 492 or 519.8) were compared with those of 143 controls individually matched for age, height, and smoking habit who
survived longer than their matched case. Flow rates in different parts
of the spirogram were compared within case-control pairs and analysed as predictors of fatal COPD by conditional logistic regression.
RESULTS
Within pair
case:control ratios of FEV1, mid expiratory flow rates
(e.g. FEF50-75) and FEF75-85 were highly
intercorrelated (r>0.7) but correlations
with FEF85-95 were weaker
(r<0.5). All indices except the
FEV1/FVC ratio were stronger predictors of death from COPD
within the first 10 years than of later deaths (15-19 years). After
adjustment for FEV1, mid expiratory flow rates
independently predicted fatal COPD but end expiratory flow rates did
not. The FEV1 adjusted mortality ratios associated with a
10% decrement in each index were 2.24 (95% CI 1.54 to 3.76) for
FEF50-75, 1.20 (95% CI 1.00 to 1.42) for
FEF75-85, and 1.10 (95% CI 0.96 to 1.26) for
FEF85-95.
CONCLUSION
This study
confirms FEV1 and mid expiratory flow rates as powerful
predictors of mortality from COPD, and suggests that measurement of end
expiratory flow rates would add little extra predictive information.
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