Clinico-epidemiological characteristics of men and women with a new diagnosis of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease: a database (SIDIAP) study
Abstract
Background
The risk of developing Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (COPD), the associated comorbidities and response to bronchodilators might differ in men and women. The objective of this study was to determine the prevalence of COPD and the clinic-epidemiological characteristics of primary care patients with COPD according to gender.
Methods
This is a cross-sectional study using electronic healthcare records Catalonia (Spain), during the 01/01/2012–31/12/2017 period. Patients from the SIDIAP database (System for the Development of Research in Primary Care) were included (5,800,000 patients registered in 279 primary care health centres). Clinic-demographic characteristics, comorbidities and blood tests results were collected for each patient. Adjusted OR (ORa) with logistic regression methods were used to determine variables associated with men and women.
Results
From an initial sample of 800,899 people, 24,135 (3%) were considered COPD patients, and 22.9%were women. The most common risk factors in women were bronchiectasis (ORa = 20.5, SD = 19.5–21.6), age > 71 years (ORa = 18.8; SD = 17.3–20.5), cor pulmonale (ORa = 5.2; SD = 4.3–6.7) and lung cancer (ORa = 3.6, SD = 3.2–4.0). Men and women presented the same comorbidities, though the strength of association was different for each gender.
Conclusions
Patients suffering high comorbidity rates. Comorbidities are similar in men and women, although the strength of association varies according to gender. Women are more susceptible to the harmful effects of smoking and present a higher proportion of bronchiectasis and OSAS.
Keywords
Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease; Epidemiology; Prevalence
Bibliographic citation
Montserrat-Capdevila J, Marsal JR, Ortega M, Castañ-Abad MT, Alsedà M, Barbé F, et al. Clinico-epidemiological characteristics of men and women with a new diagnosis of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease: a database (SIDIAP) study. BMC Pulm Med. 2021 Jan 28;21:44.
Audience
Professionals
Use this identifier for quote and/or link this document
https://hdl.handle.net/11351/6049This item appears in following collections
- HVH - Articles científics [2614]
The following license files are associated with this item: