COPD patients prescribed inhaled corticosteroid in general practice: Based on disease characteristics according to guidelines?

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Standard

COPD patients prescribed inhaled corticosteroid in general practice : Based on disease characteristics according to guidelines? / Savran, Osman; Godtfredsen, Nina; Sørensen, Torben; Jensen, Christian; Ulrik, Charlotte Suppli.

In: Chronic Respiratory Disease, Vol. 16, 2019, p. 1-8.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Savran, O, Godtfredsen, N, Sørensen, T, Jensen, C & Ulrik, CS 2019, 'COPD patients prescribed inhaled corticosteroid in general practice: Based on disease characteristics according to guidelines?', Chronic Respiratory Disease, vol. 16, pp. 1-8. https://doi.org/10.1177/1479973119867949

APA

Savran, O., Godtfredsen, N., Sørensen, T., Jensen, C., & Ulrik, C. S. (2019). COPD patients prescribed inhaled corticosteroid in general practice: Based on disease characteristics according to guidelines? Chronic Respiratory Disease, 16, 1-8. https://doi.org/10.1177/1479973119867949

Vancouver

Savran O, Godtfredsen N, Sørensen T, Jensen C, Ulrik CS. COPD patients prescribed inhaled corticosteroid in general practice: Based on disease characteristics according to guidelines? Chronic Respiratory Disease. 2019;16:1-8. https://doi.org/10.1177/1479973119867949

Author

Savran, Osman ; Godtfredsen, Nina ; Sørensen, Torben ; Jensen, Christian ; Ulrik, Charlotte Suppli. / COPD patients prescribed inhaled corticosteroid in general practice : Based on disease characteristics according to guidelines?. In: Chronic Respiratory Disease. 2019 ; Vol. 16. pp. 1-8.

Bibtex

@article{2f31799d137b44ba8d891ec1e2f7b966,
title = "COPD patients prescribed inhaled corticosteroid in general practice: Based on disease characteristics according to guidelines?",
abstract = "In a primary care setting, our aim was to investigate characteristics of patients classified as having chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) and currently being prescribed inhaled corticosteroids (ICSs). The electronic patient record system in each participating general practice was searched for patients coded as COPD (ICPC, Second Edition code R95) and treated with ICS (ACT code R03AK and R03BA, that is, ICS in combination with a long-acting β2-agonist) or ICS as monotherapy. Data, if available, on demographics, smoking habits, spirometry, COPD medication, symptom score, blood eosinophils, co-morbidity and exacerbation history were retrieved from the medical records for all identified cases. Of all patients registered in the 138 participating general practices, 12.560 (3%) were coded as COPD, of whom 32% were prescribed ICS. The final study sample comprised 2.289 COPD patients currently prescribed ICS (98% also prescribed long-acting β2-agonist), with 24% being coded as both COPD and asthma. Post-bronchodilator spirometry was available in 79% (mean forced expiratory volume in 1 second 60% pred (standard deviation (SD) 23.3)), symptom severity score in 53% (mean Medical Research Council score 2.7 (SD 1.1)) and 56% of the COPD patients had had no exacerbation in the previous year (and 45% not within the 2 previous years). Blood eosinophils were measured in 67% of the patients. Information on severity of airflow limitation was missing in 15% of the patients, and the combined information on symptom severity and exacerbation history was missing in in 46%. Most of the patients (74%) were managed only by their general practitioner. Although only one-third of the COPD patients were prescribed ICSs, our findings from this study of a large cohort of patients prescribed ICSs for COPD in general practice suggest that more detailed assessment of diagnosis and disease characteristics is likely to improve the risk–benefit ratio of maintenance therapy with ICSs in COPD patients managed in primary care.",
keywords = "characteristics, COPD, general practice, inhaled corticosteroids",
author = "Osman Savran and Nina Godtfredsen and Torben S{\o}rensen and Christian Jensen and Ulrik, {Charlotte Suppli}",
year = "2019",
doi = "10.1177/1479973119867949",
language = "English",
volume = "16",
pages = "1--8",
journal = "Chronic Respiratory Disease",
issn = "1479-9723",
publisher = "SAGE Publications",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - COPD patients prescribed inhaled corticosteroid in general practice

T2 - Based on disease characteristics according to guidelines?

AU - Savran, Osman

AU - Godtfredsen, Nina

AU - Sørensen, Torben

AU - Jensen, Christian

AU - Ulrik, Charlotte Suppli

PY - 2019

Y1 - 2019

N2 - In a primary care setting, our aim was to investigate characteristics of patients classified as having chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) and currently being prescribed inhaled corticosteroids (ICSs). The electronic patient record system in each participating general practice was searched for patients coded as COPD (ICPC, Second Edition code R95) and treated with ICS (ACT code R03AK and R03BA, that is, ICS in combination with a long-acting β2-agonist) or ICS as monotherapy. Data, if available, on demographics, smoking habits, spirometry, COPD medication, symptom score, blood eosinophils, co-morbidity and exacerbation history were retrieved from the medical records for all identified cases. Of all patients registered in the 138 participating general practices, 12.560 (3%) were coded as COPD, of whom 32% were prescribed ICS. The final study sample comprised 2.289 COPD patients currently prescribed ICS (98% also prescribed long-acting β2-agonist), with 24% being coded as both COPD and asthma. Post-bronchodilator spirometry was available in 79% (mean forced expiratory volume in 1 second 60% pred (standard deviation (SD) 23.3)), symptom severity score in 53% (mean Medical Research Council score 2.7 (SD 1.1)) and 56% of the COPD patients had had no exacerbation in the previous year (and 45% not within the 2 previous years). Blood eosinophils were measured in 67% of the patients. Information on severity of airflow limitation was missing in 15% of the patients, and the combined information on symptom severity and exacerbation history was missing in in 46%. Most of the patients (74%) were managed only by their general practitioner. Although only one-third of the COPD patients were prescribed ICSs, our findings from this study of a large cohort of patients prescribed ICSs for COPD in general practice suggest that more detailed assessment of diagnosis and disease characteristics is likely to improve the risk–benefit ratio of maintenance therapy with ICSs in COPD patients managed in primary care.

AB - In a primary care setting, our aim was to investigate characteristics of patients classified as having chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) and currently being prescribed inhaled corticosteroids (ICSs). The electronic patient record system in each participating general practice was searched for patients coded as COPD (ICPC, Second Edition code R95) and treated with ICS (ACT code R03AK and R03BA, that is, ICS in combination with a long-acting β2-agonist) or ICS as monotherapy. Data, if available, on demographics, smoking habits, spirometry, COPD medication, symptom score, blood eosinophils, co-morbidity and exacerbation history were retrieved from the medical records for all identified cases. Of all patients registered in the 138 participating general practices, 12.560 (3%) were coded as COPD, of whom 32% were prescribed ICS. The final study sample comprised 2.289 COPD patients currently prescribed ICS (98% also prescribed long-acting β2-agonist), with 24% being coded as both COPD and asthma. Post-bronchodilator spirometry was available in 79% (mean forced expiratory volume in 1 second 60% pred (standard deviation (SD) 23.3)), symptom severity score in 53% (mean Medical Research Council score 2.7 (SD 1.1)) and 56% of the COPD patients had had no exacerbation in the previous year (and 45% not within the 2 previous years). Blood eosinophils were measured in 67% of the patients. Information on severity of airflow limitation was missing in 15% of the patients, and the combined information on symptom severity and exacerbation history was missing in in 46%. Most of the patients (74%) were managed only by their general practitioner. Although only one-third of the COPD patients were prescribed ICSs, our findings from this study of a large cohort of patients prescribed ICSs for COPD in general practice suggest that more detailed assessment of diagnosis and disease characteristics is likely to improve the risk–benefit ratio of maintenance therapy with ICSs in COPD patients managed in primary care.

KW - characteristics

KW - COPD

KW - general practice

KW - inhaled corticosteroids

U2 - 10.1177/1479973119867949

DO - 10.1177/1479973119867949

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 31431060

AN - SCOPUS:85071529325

VL - 16

SP - 1

EP - 8

JO - Chronic Respiratory Disease

JF - Chronic Respiratory Disease

SN - 1479-9723

ER -

ID: 232070993