Elsevier

Respiratory Medicine

Volume 105, Issue 12, December 2011, Pages 1872-1884
Respiratory Medicine

COPD in the general population: Prevalence, incidence and survival

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.rmed.2011.06.012Get rights and content
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Summary

Worldwide, COPD is a leading cause of chronic morbidity and mortality. Although its prevalence is already well documented, very few studies have measured its incidence. We therefore investigated the prevalence, incidence and lifetime risk of COPD in the general population.

In a population-based study including subjects ≥ 40, with 12 months of history available in the Dutch IPCI database, we identified COPD cases by a two-step validation algorithm.

Among 185,325 participants with 601,283 years of follow-up, 7308 subjects with COPD were identified, and 1713 had incident COPD. The overall IR of physician-diagnosed COPD was 2.92/1000PY (95%CI 2.78–3.06). The incidence of COPD was higher in men (3.54; 95%CI 3.33–3.77) than in women (2.34; 95%CI 2.17–2.52), and the overall baseline prevalence of COPD was 3.02% (95%CI 2.94–3.10). For people who had entered the study free of COPD at the age of 40, the risk of developing COPD within the next 40 years was 12.7% for men and 8.3% for women. In patients with very severe COPD, 26% died after 1 year of follow-up, whereas 2.8% died among the non-COPD subjects.

In the general population in the Netherlands, three on 1000 subjects were diagnosed with COPD per year. The incidence increased rapidly with age and was higher in men than in women. One in eight men and one in 12 women, being COPD free at the age of 40, will develop COPD during their further life. Mortality rates differed substantially between COPD patients and non-COPD subjects of the same age, underlining the burden of this disease.

Keywords

Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease
Epidemiology (pulmonary)
Incidence
Prevalence
Survival analysis

Abbreviations

ATC
anatomical therapeutic chemical
CI
confidence interval
COPD
chronic obstructive pulmonary disease
GOLD
global initiative for chronic obstructive lung disease
GPs
general practitioner(s)
ICPC
international classification of primary care
IPCI
integrated primary care information
IR
incidence rate
PY
person-years
RR
relative risk
SD
standard deviation
WHO
world health organization

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Both authors contributed equally to this work.