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Primary Care Respiratory Journal: Journal of the General Practice Airways Group logoLink to Primary Care Respiratory Journal: Journal of the General Practice Airways Group
editorial
. 2007 Feb 10;16(1):49–53. doi: 10.3132/pcrj.2007.00012

COPD screening in primary care: who is sick?

Tjard RJ Schermer 1,*, Philip H Quanjer 2
PMCID: PMC6634183  PMID: 17297527

Abstract

Current COPD guidelines such as the GOLD workshop report use a fixed FEV1/FVC value (0.70) to define airway obstruction, and FEV1 % predicted to classify COPD severity. Evidence is emerging that this approach leads to an unacceptable percentage of false-positive diagnoses of mild and moderate COPD. Expressing FEV1 as a percent predicted value similarly introduces a bias: small people, elderly people, and especially small elderly people who are in good respiratory health will be incorrectly identified as having an abnormally low FEV1. More appropriate classification rules for defining the presence and severity of airway obstruction are urgently needed, especially for primary care doctors who have to deal with the early stages of COPD. The use of the lower limit of normal (LLN) for the FEV1/FVC ratio instead of a fixed ratio value of 0.70 would be a first rational step towards a better classification of airway obstruction.

Keywords: COPD, Screening, Definition, FEV1, FVC

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Footnotes

There were no conflicts of interest for the authors in the preparation of this paper.


Articles from Primary Care Respiratory Journal: Journal of the General Practice Airways Group are provided here courtesy of Primary Care Respiratory Society UK/Macmillan Publishers Limited

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