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- F Lemoigne, E Barré, M Arsento, F Bily, G Gibelin, M Pelser, J-L Paillasseur, J Garcia-Macé, T Perez, N Roche, and l'Association Initiatives-BPCO.
- Service de pneumologie, hôpital Pasteur, 30, voie Romaine, BP 69, 06002 Nice cedex, France. Electronic address: francklemoigne@aol.com.
- Rev Mal Respir. 2015 Jan 1;32(1):30-7.
IntroductionThis study evaluated a standardized procedure aiming at early detection of COPD in a consecutive population of employees visiting occupational medicine.MethodsA total of 2818 employees were included by 22 occupational physicians in 5 centers. Respiratory symptoms, smoking status, occupational exposures and socioprofessional categories were collected. Subjects with at least one symptom and/or risk factor underwent spirometry.ResultsIn this population aged 39±12 years, 2603 patients were free of known asthma or COPD. The presence of at least one symptom was observed in 23.6 % of employees and was significantly associated with smoking status, occupational exposure to organic dust, gas fumes and vapors, and agriculture (P<0.0001). Airflow obstruction (FEV1/FVC < 0.70) was detected in 1.7 % of 1605 employees who underwent spirometry. With the inclusion of known COPD subjects (n=22), the prevalence reached 2.38 %. COPD was significantly associated with smoking intensity. Information on subsequent diagnosis was obtained in only two cases. The quality of spirometry was inadequate in 30 % of cases. Thirty-three percent of detected COPD subjects did not report any respiratory symptoms.ConclusionThe strategy used in this study (specific questionnaire plus spirometry) allowed detection of a few cases of previously undiagnosed COPD. Occupational physicians need specific training in spirometry and a better follow-up of care pathways is required to obtain diagnostic confirmation.Copyright © 2014 SPLF. Published by Elsevier Masson SAS. All rights reserved.
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