| Literature DB >> 32252783 |
Konstantinos P Exarchos1, Athena Gogali2, Agni Sioutkou2, Christos Chronis2, Sofia Peristeri2, Konstantinos Kostikas2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Chronic respiratory diseases constitute a considerable part in the practice of pulmonologists and primary care physicians; spirometry is integral for the diagnosis and monitoring of these diseases, yet remains underutilized. The Air Next spirometer (NuvoAir, Sweden) is a novel ultra-portable device that performs spirometric measurements connected to a smartphone or tablet via Bluetooth®.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32252783 PMCID: PMC7137268 DOI: 10.1186/s12931-020-01341-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Respir Res ISSN: 1465-9921
Fig. 1The Air Next spirometer and the reported spirometric parameters
Key spirometric parameters across the four patient classes, with both spirometers: (1) conventional spirometer and (2) Air Next spirometer
| Spirometric parameters | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Asthma | Mean | 2,15 | 2,95 | 2,08 | 2,85 |
| Minimum | 0,78 | 1,10 | 0,82 | 1,04 | |
| Maximum | 4,72 | 7,06 | 4,15 | 5,71 | |
| Std. Deviation | 0,82 | 1,15 | 0,81 | 1,06 | |
| COPD | Mean | 1,96 | 3,08 | 1,85 | 2,91 |
| Minimum | 0,96 | 1,59 | 0,90 | 1,53 | |
| Maximum | 3,95 | 5,53 | 3,87 | 4,84 | |
| Std. Deviation | 0,63 | 0,83 | 0,60 | 0,72 | |
| Normal | Mean | 3,07 | 3,83 | 3,06 | 3,73 |
| Minimum | 1,81 | 2,38 | 1,73 | 2,16 | |
| Maximum | 4,83 | 6,18 | 4,84 | 6,16 | |
| Std. Deviation | 0,69 | 0,96 | 0,75 | 0,99 | |
| Restrictive | Mean | 2,25 | 2,90 | 2,16 | 2,80 |
| Minimum | 1,05 | 1,59 | 1,00 | 1,55 | |
| Maximum | 3,99 | 5,02 | 3,90 | 4,89 | |
| Std. Deviation | 0,63 | 0,85 | 0,61 | 0,77 | |
| Total | Mean | 2,36 | 3,19 | 2,29 | 3,07 |
| Minimum | 0,78 | 1,10 | 0,82 | 1,04 | |
| Maximum | 4,83 | 7,06 | 4,84 | 6,16 | |
| Std. Deviation | 0,81 | 1,02 | 0,83 | 0,97 | |
Pearson correlation coefficients and intraclass correlation coefficients (ICC) between the spirometric values obtained with the two spirometers, for the entire dataset (200 patients)
| Pearson correlation | ICC | |
|---|---|---|
| 0.976 | 0.976 | |
| 0.963 | 0.962 | |
| 0.947 | 0.945 | |
| 0.953 | 0.948 | |
| 0.922 | 0.922 | |
| 0.909 | 0.906 | |
| 0.944 | 0.942 | |
| 0.946 | 0.942 |
*for all metrics p < 0.001
Fig. 2Correlation plots between the values obtained from the two spirometers, for the spirometric parameters considered in this work: (A) FEV1, (B) FVC, (C) FEV1/FVC, (D) FEF25–75%, (E) PEF, (F) MEF25%, (G) MEF50%, (H) MEF75%
Pearson correlation and ICC between the spirometric values obtained with the two spirometers, for each of the four patient subsets, namely: asthma, COPD, restrictive and normal
| Pearson correlation | ICC | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| 0.979 | 0.979 | ||
| 0.972 | 0.969 | ||
| 0.906 | 0.898 | ||
| 0.943 | 0.943 | ||
| 0.965 | 0.963 | ||
| 0.836 | 0.835 | ||
| 0.930 | 0.929 | ||
| 0.963 | 0.959 | ||
| 0.968 | 0.967 | ||
| 0.924 | 0.914 | ||
| 0.914 | 0.916 | ||
| 0.960 | 0.96 | ||
| 0.926 | 0.925 | ||
| 0.915 | 0.89 | ||
| 0.961 | 0.959 | ||
| 0.950 | 0.949 | ||
| 0.946 | 0.946 | ||
| 0.947 | 0.942 | ||
| 0.943 | 0.937 | ||
| 0.903 | 0.895 | ||
| 0.850 | 0.85 | ||
| 0.730 | 0.725 | ||
| 0.912 | 0.905 | ||
| 0.887 | 0.884 | ||
| 0.971 | 0.968 | ||
| 0.975 | 0.974 | ||
| 0.900 | 0.899 | ||
| 0.902 | 0.898 | ||
| 0.914 | 0.914 | ||
| 0.914 | 0.908 | ||
| 0.857 | 0.856 | ||
| 0.918 | 0.917 | ||
*for all metrics p < 0.001
Fig. 3Bland-Altman plots for the evaluated spirometric parameters: (A) FEV1, (B) FVC, (C) FEV1/FVC, (D) FEF25–75%, (E) PEF, (F) MEF25%, (G) MEF50%, (H) MEF75%. Dashed lines represent the mean difference between measurements and dotted lines the 95% limits of agreement