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Can CAPTURE Be Used to Identify Undiagnosed Patients with Mild-To-Moderate COPD Likely to Benefit from Treatment?
International Journal of Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (2018)
  • Nancy K. Leidy
  • Fernando J. Martinez
  • Karen G. Malley
  • David M. Mannino
  • MeiLan K. Han
  • Elizabeth D. Bacci
  • Randall W. Brown
  • Julia F. Houfek
  • Wassim W. Labaki
  • Barry J. Make
  • Catherine A. Meldrum
  • Wilson Quezada
  • Stephen Rennard
  • Byron Thomashow
  • Barbara P. Yawn
Abstract
Background: COPD Assessment in Primary Care To Identify Undiagnosed Respiratory Disease and Exacerbation Risk (CAPTURE™) uses five questions and peak expiratory flow (PEF) thresholds (males ≤350 L/min; females ≤250 L/min) to identify patients with a forced expiratory volume in 1 second (FEV1)/forced vital capacity (FVC)11 60%–80% predicted) who may also benefit from diagnosis and treatment.

Methods: Data from the CAPTURE development study were used to test its sensitivity (SN) and specificity (SP) differentiating mild-to-moderate COPD (n=73) from no COPD (n=87). SN and SP for differentiating all COPD cases (mild to severe; n=259) from those without COPD (n=87) were also estimated. The modified Medical Research Council (mMRC) dyspnea scale and COPD Assessment Test (CAT™) were used to evaluate symptoms and health status. Clinical Trial Registration: NCT01880177, https://ClinicalTrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT01880177?term=NCT01880177&rank=1.

Results: Mean age (+SD): 61 (+10.5) years; 41% male. COPD: FEV1/FVC=0.60 (+0.1), FEV1% predicted=74% (+12.4). SN and SP for differentiating mild-to-moderate and non-COPD patients (n=160): Questionnaire: 83.6%, 67.8%; PEF (≤450 L/min; ≤350 L/min): 83.6%, 66.7%; CAPTURE (Questionnaire+PEF): 71.2%, 83.9%. COPD patients whose CAPTURE results suggested that diagnostic evaluation was warranted (n=52) were more likely to be symptomatic than patients whose results did not (n=21) (mMRC >2: 37% vs 5%, p10: 86% vs 57%, p

Conclusion: CAPTURE (450/350) may be useful for identifying symptomatic patients with mild-to-moderate airflow obstruction in need of diagnostic evaluation for COPD.
Publication Date
June 13, 2018
DOI
https://doi.org/10.2147/copd.s152226
Publisher Statement
© 2018 Leidy et al.

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Citation Information
Nancy K. Leidy, Fernando J. Martinez, Karen G. Malley, David M. Mannino, et al.. "Can CAPTURE Be Used to Identify Undiagnosed Patients with Mild-To-Moderate COPD Likely to Benefit from Treatment?" International Journal of Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease Vol. 13 (2018) p. 1901 - 1912
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/david_mannino/270/
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This work is licensed under a Creative Commons CC_BY-NC International License.