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Sex differences between women and men with COPD: A new analysis of the 3CIA study.

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2020-08-13

Authors

Perez, Tamara Alonso
Castillo, Elena García
Ancochea, Julio
Pastor Sanz, María Teresa
Almagro, Pere
Martínez-Camblor, Pablo
Miravitlles, Marc
Rodríguez-Carballeira, Mónica
Navarro, Annie
Lamprecht, Bernd

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Abstract

There is partial evidence that COPD is expressed differently in women than in men, namely on symptoms, pulmonary function, exacerbations, comorbidities or prognosis. There is a need to improve the characterization of COPD in females. We obtained and pooled data of 17 139 patients from 22 COPD cohorts and analysed the clinical differences by sex, establishing the relationship between these characteristics in women and the prognosis and severity of the disease. Comparisons were established with standard statistics and survival analysis, including crude and multivariate Cox-regression analysis. Overall, 5355 (31.2%) women were compared with men with COPD. Women were younger, had lower pack-years, greater FEV1%, lower BMI and a greater number of exacerbations (all p  COPD in women has some characteristic traits expressed differently than compared to men, mainly with more dyspnea and COPD exacerbations and less phlegm, among others, although long-term survival appears better in female COPD patients.

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MeSH Terms

Age Factors
Body Mass Index
Comorbidity
Disease Progression
Dyspnea
Female
Forced Expiratory Volume
Humans
Male
Prognosis
Prospective Studies
Pulmonary Disease, Chronic Obstructive
Severity of Illness Index
Sex Characteristics
Sputum
Survival Rate
Time Factors

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Keywords

COPD, Female, Sex, Survival

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