(Chest. 2000;117:1S-4S.)
© 2000
American College of Chest Physicians
The Impact of COPD on Lung Health Worldwide*
Epidemiology and Incidence
Suzanne Hurd, PhD
*
From the Division of Lung Diseases, National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute, Bethesda, MD.
Correspondence to: Suzanne Hurd, PhD, Division of Lung Diseases, National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute, 6701 Rockledge Dr, Suite 10122, Bethesda, MD, 20892
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Abstract
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Information on the prevalence of COPD was obtained from vital
statistics, health interview surveys, hospital charge records, national
publications, and the World Health Organization (WHO). These data
indicate that COPD is a common disease with implications for
global health. In the United States, morbidity caused by COPD is 4%,
making COPD the fourth leading cause of death, exceeded only by heart
attacks, cancer, and stroke. Internationally, there is substantial
variation in death rates possibly reflecting smoking behavior, type and
processing of tobacco, pollution, climate, respiratory management, and
genetic factors. The Global Obstructive Lung Disease Initiative,
initiated by the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute and the WHO,
aims to raise awareness of the increasing burden of COPD, decrease
morbidity and mortality, promote further study of the condition, and
implement programs to prevent COPD.
Key Words: COPD education programs morbidity public health
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Introduction
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COPD
is a common, costly, and preventable disease that has
implications for global health. It is the fourth leading cause of death
in the United States, exceeded only by heart attacks, cancers, and
stroke (Table 1)
.1
Among 28 industrialized countries, the United States
ranks 12th in COPD mortality for men and seventh for women. It has been
estimated that by the year 2020, COPD will be fifth among the
conditions that will be the highest burden to society on a worldwide
scale.2
Hospitalization rates are rising dramatically.
Economic costs are enormous, estimated at > $14 billion in the United
States. At best, current treatments, although very valuable in selected
patients, are only palliative.
Information about COPD is available from vital statistics, health
interview surveys, and hospital discharge records from national
publications in the United States and from statistics
provided by the World Health Organization (WHO). However, problems
interpreting measures of the frequency of disease and death in the
populationespecially with intercountry comparisonsare enormous with
COPD. The term itself is used in a variety of ways, leading to
misclassification and omission from medical records and vital
statistics when it is judged to be a contributing, but not main, cause
of death. Thus, data on morbidity and mortality from COPD must always
be interpreted with caution.
 |
Course of Disease
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In the mid-1980s, the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute
(NHLBI) initiated a long-term, multicenter project, the Lung Health
Study, to determine whether a program incorporating smoking
intervention and the use of an inhaled bronchodilator can slow the rate
of decline in FEV1. The study followed nearly
6,000 male and female smokers aged 35 to 60 years with mild obstructive
pulmonary disease. Major study results were reported in November
1994.3
An aggressive smoking intervention program
significantly reduced the age-related decline in
FEV1 in middle-aged smokers with mild airways
obstruction. Use of an inhaled anticholinergic bronchodilator resulted
in relatively small improvements in FEV1, which
appeared to be reversed after the drug was discontinued. Use of the
bronchodilator did not influence the long-term decline of
FEV1.
Since the publication of that major study outcome, much has been
learned about the study population. For example, from data already
analyzed, > 2% of the patients screened for the Lung Health Study
developed lung cancer. Although success in smoking cessation can
protect lung function in a group at high risk of developing a
progressive decline in FEV1 as a prelude to
symptomatic COPD, a 5-year sustained smoking cessation rate was very
hard to achieve despite the intensive interventions. This underscores
the need to increase efforts at prevention of smoking. There is also a
need to continue to explore approaches for early detection of disease,
including pulmonary function measures, biochemical or immunologic
tests, or identification of genetic markers of susceptible smokers.
 |
Magnitude of the Problem in the United States
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Prevalence
Data on the prevalence of COPD depend on multiple factors, such as
diagnostic criteria, potential confounding conditions, the need to make
appropriate age adjustments, and the requirement to make adjustments
for revisions in the International Classification of Disease (ICD)
codes. Thus, estimates of the frequency and distribution of COPD tend
to be inadequate and incomplete. In the United States, estimates of
prevalence have been developed from responses to standard questions
asked of representative samples of the civilian noninstitutionalized
population in the National Health Interview Surveys from the National
Center for Health Statistics (Table 2)
.1
In 1994, there were estimated to be 14.021 million men
and women with chronic bronchitis, 2.208 million with emphysema, and
14.562 million with asthma. Rates (unadjusted for age) of reporting
emphysema were higher for men than women, whereas rates of reporting
chronic bronchitis and asthma were higher for women than men. Table 2
also shows larger numbers of affected persons and higher rates of
reporting of these conditions in 1994 than in 1986 and 1970 for both
chronic bronchitis and asthma; rates of emphysema declined in 1994
compared with previous years in both men and women.
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Table 2.. Estimated Prevalence of Chronic Bronchitis,
Emphysema, and Asthma in the United States, 1970, 1986, and
1994*
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Visits to Physicians
In 1995, > 16 million visits were made to doctors offices for
the treatment of conditions the principal diagnoses of which were
listed as COPD and allied conditions (up sharply from the 9.3
million reported in 1985).1
Among the first listed, or
principal, diagnoses of chronic respiratory disease, bronchitis was the
most frequent (10 million visits), and chronic airways obstruction was
second most frequent (4 million visits). These numbers are based on the
National Ambulatory Medical Care Survey and apply to office visits, not
to individual patients. The same survey indicated that there were 9
million office visits for asthma in 1995.
Hospitalizations
Between 1970 and 1995, in the United States, COPD hospitalization
rates varied considerably, although the reasons for this variation are
not clear. Hospital discharge data from the National Center for Health
Statistics relate to numbers and rates of discharges for related
conditions according to whether they are listed as first or as a
subordinate cause of hospitalization. Unfortunately, discharges for
individual patients admitted more than once in the course of the year
cannot be linked. For the entire group of conditions, there were
553,000 discharges with COPD or allied conditions given as the first
listed diagnosis; more than half of these were coded as bronchitis,
chronic and unqualified, ICD codes 490 and 491.1
Mortality
COPD accounted for 4% of all deaths in the United States in 1995,
fourth highest among causes of death (Table 1)
. The numbers of deaths
attributed to COPD in 1985 and 1995 are shown in Table 3 ,
which provides information on the specific conditions entered on death
certificates for COPD deaths. In 1995, the age-adjusted death rate per
100,000 population was 54.7 for white men, 42.5 for black men, 31.4 for
white women, and 15.6 for black women. Although highest in white men,
COPD mortality rates for white men have remained relatively constant
since the 1980s. During the same period, the rate gradually increased
in black men but doubled in white women and in black
women.1
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Time Trends in Morbidity and Mortality From COPD in the United
States
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Although COPD is a leading cause of illness and death, its
recognition as a public health problem has been slow to evolve despite
the rising mortality rate for COPD and the decline in death rates for
most of the cardiovascular diseases. For example, between 1966 and
1995, the age-adjusted death rates for coronary heart disease and
stroke declined by 45% and 58%, respectively, whereas the death rate
for COPD increased by 71%.1
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International Comparisons of COPD Mortality and Morbidity
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Death rates for COPD and allied conditions for men and women aged
35 to 74 years are shown by country for the latest year available from
the WHO (Fig 1)
.
Among 28 industrialized countries, the United States ranks 12th in
COPD mortality for men and seventh for women. Taken at face value,
these data indicate substantial variation among countries for both
sexes. Death rates were lower among women than among men in every
nation. Differences in COPD death rates among countries have attracted
considerable attention, with multiple hypotheses suggested including
smoking behaviors, type and processing of tobacco used in cigarettes,
outdoor and indoor pollution, climate, frequency and management of
respiratory infections, and genetic factors. However, the lack of
standardization of death certification and coding practices as well as
differences in diagnostic practices and availability and quality of
medical care in different countries severely curtails the
interpretation of the data.
 |
Global Obstructive Lung Disease Initiative: International Program
on COPD
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The projected increase in smoking rates throughout the world has
led to the recognition that COPD will increase as a global burden of
disease. Thus, the NHLBI, in cooperation with the WHO, has initiated a
program called the Global Obstructive Lung Disease Initiative. The
objectives of this initiative are the following: to bring the
importance of the rising burden of COPD to the attention of public
health officials, the medical community, and the general public; to
decrease morbidity and mortality from COPD through implementation and
evaluation of effective programs for diagnosis and management; to
promote study into reasons for the increasing prevalence of COPD,
including its relationship with the environment; and to implement
effective programs to prevent COPD. A panel of experts, working with
existing COPD guidelines from multiple countries, is developing a
program document that will be available for distribution by early 2000.
At that time, the NHLBI and the WHO will collaborate on its
dissemination.
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Summary
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COPD is the only leading cause of death that is increasing in
prevalence. Although it is known that cigarette smoking is the major
cause of this disease and, therefore, that COPD largely is preventable,
COPD is already a major burden on the health-care community, a burden
that will continue to escalate around the world in the next century.
Work is under way, through an NHLBI/WHO Global Obstructive Lung Disease
Initiative, to bring information about COPD to public health officials,
the medical community, and the public. However, more effective methods
are required for early detection of disease.
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Footnotes
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Abbreviations: ICD = International Classification
of Disease; NHLBI = National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute;
WHO = World Health Organization
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References
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-
NHLBI morbidity and mortality chartbook, 1998. Available at http://www.nhlbi.nih.gov/resources/docs/cht-book.htm
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Murray, CJL, Lopez, AD (1996) Evidence-based health policy: lessons from the global burden of disease study. Science 274,740-743[Free Full Text]
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Anthonisen, NR, Connett, JE, Kiley, JP, et al (1994) The Lung Health Study Research Group: effects of smoking intervention and the use of an inhaled anticholinergic bronchodilator on the rate of decline of FEV1. JAMA 272,1497-1505[Abstract]
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