Polymorphisms in COPD show disease’s complexity
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A genetic variant associated with a poorer therapeutic response in patients with asthma may also be linked to more severe chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, researchers have found.

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Dr. Vera De Palo
Vera De Palo, MD, FCCP, comments: This study demonstrates that the pulmonologist’s “bread and butter” disease, COPD, continues to be very complex and gives us an understanding of why patients may not respond as we expect them to.

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Dr. Vera De Palo
Vera De Palo, MD, FCCP, comments: This study demonstrates that the pulmonologist’s “bread and butter” disease, COPD, continues to be very complex and gives us an understanding of why patients may not respond as we expect them to.

Body

 

Dr. Vera De Palo
Vera De Palo, MD, FCCP, comments: This study demonstrates that the pulmonologist’s “bread and butter” disease, COPD, continues to be very complex and gives us an understanding of why patients may not respond as we expect them to.

Title
Polymorphisms in COPD show disease’s complexity
Polymorphisms in COPD show disease’s complexity

 

A genetic variant associated with a poorer therapeutic response in patients with asthma may also be linked to more severe chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, researchers have found.

 

A genetic variant associated with a poorer therapeutic response in patients with asthma may also be linked to more severe chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, researchers have found.

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FROM PULMONARY PHARMACOLOGY & THERAPEUTICS

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Key clinical point: A genetic variation linked to poorer disease control in asthma is associated with a similar effect in patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease.

Major finding: Patients with COPD who are Arg/Arg homozygotes at codon 16 of the beta-2-adrenoreceptor gene were significantly more likely to require two or more courses of antibiotic therapy and more systemic corticosteroid therapy than were patients with other polymorphisms.

Data source: A retrospective cohort study of 92 patients with stable grade COPD.

Disclosures: The Ministry of Science and Education supported the study. No conflicts of interest were declared.