Co-Morbidities as Predictors of Airflow Limitation among Smokers in England

  • Kayyali R
  • Hassan Y
  • Hesso I
  • et al.
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Abstract

The prevalence of co-morbidities among patients with Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (COPD) is well documented in the literature. Therefore, this pilot study aimed to identify whether co-morbidities screening would enhance COPD case-finding. Smoking patients were approached at Croydon University Hospital and two local community pharmacies (CPs). Their co-morbidities, respiratory symptoms, smoking pack-years and exercise capacity were collected. Airflow limitation was determined using handheld spirometry (COPD-6) device. The prevalence of airflow limitation was 42% (n = 21/50). The main identified predictors of airflow limitation were: co-morbidities (OR = 9, CI: 1.04–77.81, p = 0.025), respiratory symptoms (OR = 33.54, CI: 1.06–11.77, p = 0.039) and smoking history of ≥20 pack-years (OR = 3.94, CI: 1.13–13.64, p = 0.029). CPs were the main location for case-finding. This study demonstrated the need to screen for co-morbidities for COPD case-finding within CPs.

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APA

Kayyali, R., Hassan, Y., Hesso, I., & Siva, R. (2018). Co-Morbidities as Predictors of Airflow Limitation among Smokers in England. Pharmacy, 6(2), 45. https://doi.org/10.3390/pharmacy6020045

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