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Type Journal Article - Respiratory research
Title Phenotypic comparison between smoking and non-smoking chronic obstructive pulmonary disease
Author(s)
Volume 21
Issue 1
Publication (Day/Month/Year) 2020
Page numbers 50
URL https://doi.org/10.1186/s12931-020-1310-9
Abstract
Background
Although COPD among non-smokers (NS-COPD) is common, little is known about this phenotype. We compared NS-COPD subjects with smoking COPD (S-COPD) patients in a rural Indian population using a variety of clinical, physiological, radiological, sputum cellular and blood biomarkers.

Methods
Two hundred ninety subjects (118 healthy, 79 S-COPD, 93 NS-COPD) performed pre- and post-bronchodilator spirometry and were followed for 2 years to study the annual rate of decline in lung function. Body plethysmography, impulse oscillometry, inspiratory-expiratory HRCT, induced sputum cellular profile and blood biomarkers were compared between 49 healthy, 45 S-COPD and 55 NS-COPD subjects using standardized methods. Spirometric response to oral corticosteroids was measured in 30 female NS-COPD patients.

Results
Compared to all male S-COPD subjects, 47% of NS-COPD subjects were female, were younger by 3.2 years, had greater body mass index, a slower rate of decline in lung function (80 vs 130 mL/year), more small airways obstruction measured by impulse oscillometry (p < 0.001), significantly less emphysema (29% vs 11%) on CT scans, lower values in lung diffusion parameters, significantly less neutrophils in induced sputum (p < 0.05) and tended to have more sputum eosinophils. Hemoglobin and red cell volume were higher and serum insulin lower in S-COPD compared to NS-COPD. Spirometric indices, symptoms and quality of life were similar between S-COPD and NS-COPD. There was no improvement in spirometry in NS-COPD patients after 2 weeks of an oral corticosteroid.

Conclusions
Compared to S-COPD, NS-COPD is seen in younger subjects with equal male-female predominance, is predominantly a small-airway disease phenotype with less emphysema, preserved lung diffusion and a slower rate of decline in lung function.
Sundeep Salvi, Bill B Brashier , Jyoti Londhe , Kanchan Pyasi , Vandana Vincent , Shilpa S Kajale , Sajid Tambe , Kuldeep Mandani , Arjun Nair , Sze Mun Mak , Sapna Madas , Sanjay Juvekar , Louise E Donnelly , and Peter J Barnes. "Phenotypic comparison between smoking and non-smoking chronic obstructive pulmonary disease." Respiratory research 21, no. 1 (2020): 50.
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