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Vol. 23. Issue 3.
Pages 173-174 (May - June 2017)
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Vol. 23. Issue 3.
Pages 173-174 (May - June 2017)
Letter to the Editor
Open Access
COPD: A controversial disease?
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A. Araújo
Respiratory Department, H. Sª Oliveira, Guimarães, Portugal
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COPD is today the most common chronic respiratory disease and a growing cause of worldwide morbidity and mortality, with many cardiovascular, musculoskeletal, metabolic and mental sequelae, some usually referred to as comorbidities. According to some authors, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease is not a disease in the true sense of the word, but a very popular acronym.2 The defining characteristics of a disease are clinical symptoms and signs, structural abnormalities, function disorders, and causation or etiology,3 but COPD is a heterogeneous collection of different pathophysiological processes that result in the development of chronic and usually progressive airflow limitation,4 as defined by GOLD.5 Poor lung development, excess lung damage, airway remodeling and deficient lung repair are different processes affecting the development and progression of COPD. The Fletcher–Peto curve remains a landmark reference for the natural history of COPD, but because of the heterogeneous nature of the disease, several natural histories are possible, and there may be patients progressing on different natural history trajectories, from slowly progressive to rapidly progressive natural histories.6 Now we recognize that the term COPD brings together a number of entities with different clinical and pathophysiological features, hence the emphasis given to the great diversity of phenotypes of COPD.7 This emphasis in COPD phenotypes was born both from the current trend of doing a patient-centered medicine and from the need to understand the disease in its heterogeneity.

COPD is characterized by persistent airway limitation that is not fully reversible and is usually progressive.8 Obstruction is defined by the GOLD as a post-bronchodilator FEV1/FVC<0.7, but this criterion of obstruction has been increasingly questioned, and because there is currently no consensus about the best criterion to be used in COPD,9 this remains a matter of continuous debate in literature.10 Furthermore, even though obstruction is a landmark of the disease, some authors wonder if obstruction does always need to be present in early stages, or if emphysema, in the absence of obstruction, represents COPD.4 However, in any stage of the disease, and despite obstruction not being fully reversible, bronchodilators remain the cornerstone of the treatment, since they usually cause a significant clinical improvement, even without significantly modifying FEV1.11

Inflammation plays a central role in the pathogenesis of COPD, and keeps on after smoking cessation, but there still persists the concept of COPD as a steroid-resistant disease.12 Conflicting with this, clinical evidence shows an effect of inhaled corticosteroids (ICS) on the rate of COPD exacerbations and in quality of life,13 and consensus was reached regarding the indication of ICS in ACOS and frequent exacerbating phenotypes.14 ICS have some adverse effects, the increased incidence of pneumonia being the best-documented treatment risk,15 but, paradoxically, the risk of dying is not higher in ICS treated patients. Nevertheless, ICS have been widely used, with more than 70% of COPD patients being treated with ICS,16 and observational studies have shown the persistence of an excessive use of ICS in mild COPD. This extensive use is discrepant from treatment guidelines, but the use of ICS in COPD is still an important matter of debate, as is the question of the effects of discontinuation of ICS.

In the general population, the benefits of physical activity are well documented. Physical inactivity is a central problem in COPD patients in all severity stages of the disease, it plays a crucial role in the development of COPD comorbidities and it is the best predictor of all-cause mortality in these patients.17 Physical activity can be, along with smoking cessation, the best cost-benefit measure to prevent disease progression, comorbidities and mortality. As decreased physical activity is already present early in the development of the disease, the implementation of regular physical activity should be an important secondary prevention strategy. However, GOLD and many other guidelines do not include any recommendations regarding physical activity in COPD, which take into account the physical exercise requirements in relations to duration, frequency and intensity. The recently published ATS/ERS statement,8 regarding the types of research which will have the greatest impact on patient-centered outcomes in COPD, does not refer to any research recommendation regarding physical exercise, except for pulmonary rehabilitation.

Despite all these controversies, COPD is a disease defined by a function disorder. Although heterogeneous and associated with a chronic inflammatory response in the airways and lungs, COPD is an obstructive disease; the airflow limitation is chronic, not fully reversible and usually progressive. In medical discourse, a disease is a sum of abnormal phenomena that place a living organism in a biological disadvantage, and its defining characteristics may only be pathophysiological.18 The name of a disease is a conclusion of a diagnostic process, the purpose of which is more to simplify and clarify the medical discourse than to decide a treatment for a given patient. In pulmonary medicine, it is important to distinguish between the connotation of the word obstruction as a function disorder, or a disease like COPD.

Conflicts of interest

The author has no conflicts of interest to declare.

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