| Literature DB >> 32415077 |
S J van de Hei1,2, B M J Flokstra-de Blok3,4,5, H J Baretta6, N E Doornewaard6, T van der Molen6,3, K W Patberg7, E C M Ruberg8, T R J Schermer9, I Steenbruggen8, J W K van den Berg7, J W H Kocks3,5.
Abstract
American and European societies' (ATS/ERS) criteria for spirometry are often not met in primary care. Yet, it is unknown if quality is sufficient for daily clinical use. We evaluated quality of spirometry in primary care based on clinical usefulness, meeting ATS/ERS criteria and agreement on diagnosis between general practitioners (GPs) and pulmonologists. GPs included ten consecutive spirometry tests and detailed history questionnaires of patients who underwent spirometry as part of usual care. GPs and two pulmonologists assessed the spirometry tests and questionnaires on clinical usefulness and formulated a diagnosis. In total, 149 participants covering 15 GPs were included. Low agreements were found on diagnosis between GPs and pulmonologists 1 (κ = 0.39) and 2 (κ = 0.44). GPs and pulmonologists rated >88% of the tests as clinically useful, although 13% met ATS/ERS criteria. This real-life study demonstrated that clinical usefulness of routine primary care spirometry tests was high, although agreement on diagnosis was low.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32415077 PMCID: PMC7229174 DOI: 10.1038/s41533-020-0177-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: NPJ Prim Care Respir Med ISSN: 2055-1010 Impact factor: 2.871
Fig. 1Flow of GPs and participants through the study.
Flowchart.
Characteristics of participating general practices and participants.
| General practices ( | |
|---|---|
| Annual number of spirometry tests performed ( | |
| ≤40 | 0 (0.0) |
| 41−80 | 4 (33.3) |
| 81−120 | 4 (33.3) |
| >120 | 4 (33.3) |
| Participation in accredited spirometry educational programme, | |
| General practitioners ( | 12 (80.0) |
| Practice nurses ( | 14 (93.3) |
BMI body mass index, MRC Medical Research Council dyspnoea scale, ACQ Asthma Control Questionnaire, CCQ COPD Clinical Questionnaire, FEV forced expiratory volume in 1 s, FVC forced vital capacity.
aBased on largest pre-bronchodilator value.
Agreement between GPs and pulmonologist 1 (a), GPs and pulmonologist 2 (b) and pulmonologists (c) on the presence of asthma, COPD, no respiratory disease or other diagnoses.
| a | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| GP | |||||
| Asthma | COPD | No disease | Other | Total | |
| Pulm 1 | |||||
| Asthma | 18 | 2 | 0 | 5 | 25 |
| COPD | 0 | 33 | 0 | 14 | 47 |
| No disease | 3 | 1 | 8 | 6 | 18 |
| Other | 20 | 2 | 9 | 19 | 50 |
| Total | 41 | 38 | 17 | 44 | 140 |
GP general practitioner, Pulm pulmonologist, COPD chronic obstructive pulmonary disease.
Fig. 2Agreement on diagnosis.
Agreement on overall diagnosis, asthma and COPD between the GPs and pulmonologists (n = 140), between the pulmonologists (n = 141) and between the GPs and pulmonologists when only including cases on which the two pulmonologists agreed on diagnosis (n = 55). *Includes all cases on which the two pulmonologists agreed on diagnosis (n = 55).
Spirometry tests that did and did not meet the ATS/ERS acceptability and repeatability criteria (n = 149).
| LFT 1 | LFT 2 | |
|---|---|---|
| ATS/ERS criteria met (acceptability and repeatability) | 20 (13.4) | 20 (13.4) |
| ATS/ERS criteria not met | 102 (68.5) | 107 (71.8) |
| ATS/ERS criteria not assessable | 27 (18.1) | 22 (14.8) |
| Acceptability (three acceptable curves)a | 20 (13.4) | 20 (13.4) |
| Good start of expiration (PEF reached quickly) | 55 (36.9) | 47 (31.5) |
| Reached peak with maximal effort | 53 (35.6) | 58 (38.9) |
| Smooth continuous exhalation | 87 (58.4) | 77 (51.7) |
| Good exhalation (no pinching) | 94 (63.1) | 88 (59.1) |
| No extra breaths being taken during manoeuvre | 142 (95.3) | 140 (94.0) |
| Plateau (≥1 s < 0.025 L change in volume) | 101 (67.8) | 90 (60.4) |
| Repeatabilityb | 136 (91.3) | 136 (91.3) |
| Difference between two largest values of FEV1 ≤ 0.150 L | 146 (98.0) | 146 (98.0) |
| Difference between two largest values of FVC ≤ 0.150 L | 136 (91.3) | 136 (91.3) |
| Acceptability (≥2 acceptable curves) | 49 (32.9) | 49 (32.9) |
All values are n (%).
ATS/ERS American Thoracic Society/European Respiratory Society, LFT lung function technician.
aDuration is not used as a criterion for the three acceptable curves.
bRepeatability was assessed regardless of obtaining three acceptable curves.
Fig. 3Clinical usefulness, quality of spirometry and ATS/ERS criteria.
Clinical usefulness and quality of the spirometry tests (n = 149) as assessed by the GPs and pulmonologists and ATS/ERS criteria as assessed by the lung function technicians. GP general practitioner, Pulm pulmonologist, ATS/ERS American Thoracic Society/European Respiratory Society. *One assessment by the GPs was missing.
| Acceptability criteriaa |
|---|
| 1. Good start of expiration—PEF reached quickly (extrapolated volume <5% or FVC < 0.15 L) |
| 2. Reached peak with maximal effort |
| 3. Smooth continuous exhalation (no cough during the first second) |
| 4. Good exhalation (no glottis closure, pinched exhalation or hesitation) |
| 5. No extra breaths being taken during the manoeuvre |
| 6. Duration exhalation ≥ 6 sb |
| 7. Plateau (≥1s < 0.025 L change in volume) |