Pulmonary Disease, Chronic Obstructive Clinical Trial
Official title:
Prevalence of Chronic Airway Onstruction in a Subject Population With a History of Cigarette Smoking in a Primary Care Setting
This is a cross-sectional study to determine the prevalence of symptomatic airway
obstruction using the LFQ as a screening tool in primary care patients with a history of
cigarette smoking and to provide descriptive data of this patient population. The study
design is multicenter, cross-sectional, and involves a single visit. This study is not
intended to evaluate the efficacy or safety of any investigational products. Following
completion of written informed consent, eligible study subjects will complete a single study
visit encompassing all required study assessments. Study subjects will not receive blinded
study medication for evaluations of efficacy and safety.
All eligible patients will complete a self-administered Web survey that will include the
LFQ. To meet both the primary and secondary aims, all patients with LFQ ≤ 18 (current
cut-off for obstruction), as well as 5% of patients who score > 18, will be candidates for
spirometric assessment. Only this subset of patients will undergo pulmonary function tests.
Albuterol will be self-administered for determination of post-bronchodilator forced
expiratory volume in one-second (FEV1)/forced vital capacity (FVC) ratio and
post-bronchodilator FEV1 percentage of predicted normal. The study will end when 800
patients have been assessed spirometrically or 3,000 patients have completed the LFQ
(whichever criterion is achieved first).
Prior to implementation of the full study, a pilot study will be conducted at two of the
chosen study sites to pretest the proposed study procedures.
The incidence of COPD is increasing throughout the world, with the vast majority of patients
with the disease remaining undiagnosed (Coultas et al., 2001) and underreported (Frank et
al., 2006; Global Initiative for Chronic Obstructive Lung Disease [GOLD], 2003; Peña et al.,
2000; Takahashi et al., 2003; Van Weel et al., 2002). This is highlighted in a recent study
that found 63% of patients with a smoking history and spirometry-confirmed COPD had no
mention of COPD in their medical records (Frank et al., 2006). These findings are indicative
of a low awareness of the condition among patients with COPD (Stratelis et al., 2004).
The use of patient-completed questionnaires to assess smoking history and status,
respiratory symptoms, and socioeconomic status is a reliable and valid method of screening
for COPD diagnosis and severity (Bednarek et al., 2008). The range of conditions described
as COPD has led to confusion about disease terminology and difficulty with diagnosis and
communication, particularly in primary care (Fukuhara et al., 2005; Kesten and Chapman,
1993). Considering that approximately 80% of patients diagnosed with COPD are current and
previous cigarette smokers, mass screening of these populations using office-based
spirometry becomes an attractive option (Furguson et al., 2000). A questionnaire designed to
capture patient answers specific to their disease condition could provide invaluable
information, which, if it correlates adequately with spirometry, could markedly improve
diagnosis and provide avenues for appropriate treatment decisions. There are data supporting
the argument that the prevalence of physician-diagnosed COPD is much lower than the
prevalence suggested by results of population-based spirometric surveys (Chapman, 2004;
Fukuchi et al., 2004; Peña et al., 2000; Soriano et al., 2000). Evidently, the development
of a practical and reliable tool could help bridge the gaps in diagnosis and disease
awareness. Moreover, prevalence studies underscore the need to improve awareness of COPD
among cigarette-smoking populations and to provide information that could potentially lead
patients to seek treatment. Hence, there is a need to develop a screening questionnaire able
to identify patients at risk of airflow obstruction, for further evaluation. The LFQ,
developed for this purpose, consists of a series of questions pertaining to COPD risk
factors and symptoms.
Specifically, this study will aim to identify patients at risk of airflow obstruction as
identified by the LFQ, the results of which will be followed for confirmation through
subsequent spirometry in a subset of subjects. The LFQ will be evaluated against the
spirometry results comparatively. A minimum age limit of 30 years is selected for subject
participation in this study for further validation of the LFQ and to ascertain the
enrollment of an adequately representative subset of subjects who may be bronchitic or
asymptomatic for COPD, for comparison purposes with subjects with COPD. The study of this
subject population may increase the sensitivity of COPD diagnosis and potentially provide
information that could improve disease awareness and, as a consequence, possibly lead to
optimization of disease management in primary care.
This is a cross-sectional study to determine the prevalence of symptomatic airway
obstruction using the LFQ as a screening tool in primary care patients with a history of
cigarette smoking and to provide descriptive data of this patient population. The study
design is multicenter, cross-sectional, and involves a single visit. This study is not
intended to evaluate the efficacy or safety of any investigational products. Following
completion of written informed consent, eligible study subjects will complete a single study
visit encompassing all required study assessments. Study subjects will not receive blinded
study medication for evaluations of efficacy and safety.
All eligible patients will complete a self-administered Web survey that will include the
LFQ. To meet both the primary and secondary aims, all patients with LFQ ≤ 18 (current
cut-off for obstruction), as well as 5% of patients who score > 18, will be candidates for
spirometric assessment. Only this subset of patients will undergo pulmonary function tests.
Albuterol will be self-administered for determination of post-bronchodilator forced
expiratory volume in one-second (FEV1)/forced vital capacity (FVC) ratio and
post-bronchodilator FEV1 percentage of predicted normal. The study will end when 800
patients have been assessed spirometrically or 3,000 patients have completed the LFQ
(whichever criterion is achieved first).
Prior to implementation of the full study, a pilot study will be conducted at two of the
chosen study sites to pretest the proposed study procedures.
;
Time Perspective: Cross-Sectional
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