Defining and Grading an Obstructive Ventilatory Impairment: American Thoracic Society/ European Respiratory Society Interpretive Strategies of 2005 Versus 2022

Balsam Barkous *

Department of Pulmonary Function Tests of Abderrahmen Mami Pneumology and Phthisiology Hospital, Ariana, Tunisia.

Khouloud Kchaou

Department of Pulmonary Function Tests of Abderrahmen Mami Pneumology and Phthisiology Hospital, Ariana, Tunisia and Laboratory of Physiopathology, Food and Biomolecules (LR-17-ES-03), Technology Center of Sidi Thabet, University of Manouba, Tunis, Tunisia.

Chaima Briki

Department of Pulmonary Function Tests of Abderrahmen Mami Pneumology and Phthisiology Hospital, Ariana, Tunisia.

Sirine Jamli

Department of Pulmonary Function Tests of Abderrahmen Mami Pneumology and Phthisiology Hospital, Ariana, Tunisia.

Saloua Ben Khamsa Jameleddine

Department of Pulmonary Function Tests of Abderrahmen Mami Pneumology and Phthisiology Hospital, Ariana, Tunisia and Laboratory of Physiopathology, Food and Biomolecules (LR-17-ES-03), Technology Center of Sidi Thabet, University of Manouba, Tunis, Tunisia.

*Author to whom correspondence should be addressed.


Abstract

Background: The American Thoracic Society (ATS) and the European Respiratory Society (ERS) have issued several updates to their guidelines for lung function testing between 2005 and 2022.

Objective: We aimed to compare ATS/ERS recommendations for 2005(R1) and 2022(R2) in defining Obstructive Ventilatory Impairment (OVI) and in classifying its severity.

Patients and Methods: It was a retrospective comparative study including 1129 patients. All patients underwent spirometry with measurement of Forced Expiratory Volume in 1 second (FEV1) and Forced Vital Capacity (FVC). An OVI was considered according to R1 when FEV1/FVC ratio is under the Lower Limit of Normal (LLN) and when the z-score of FEV1/FVC ratio is under -1.645 according to R2. For the severity levels of airflow obstruction: ATS/ERS previously recommended the use of percent predicted FEV1 with 5 levels using cut values of 70%, 60%, 50% and 35%. Recently updated for z-scores with cut values of -2, -2.5 and -4. Mean age was 54.23±19.23 years.

Results: For defining an OVI, both definitions were comparable (529 patients with OVI). For the severity classification, the following proportions were assessed: 151 mild, 86 moderate,84 moderately severe, 133 severe and 75 very severe vs 148 mild, 238 moderate, 76 severe and 67 cases having a normal FEV1 (z-score of FEV1 above -1.645), which were classified as mild according to R1. Mild OVI(R2) were distributed according to R1 into 74 mild, 51 moderate, 16 moderately severe and 7 severe. Moderate OVI (R2) were dispatched using R1 to 10 mild, 34 moderate, 66 moderately severe, 103 severe and 25 very severe. Severe OVI(R2) were classified as 1 moderate, 2 moderately severe, 23 severe and 50 very severe.

Conclusion: ATS/ERS new and previous recommendations seem to be comparable in defining OVI. However, discrepancies were assessed in classifying its severity.

Keywords: Physiology, respiratory function test, pulmonary disease, spirometry, forced expiratory volume, vital capacity


How to Cite

Barkous , Balsam, Khouloud Kchaou, Chaima Briki, Sirine Jamli, and Saloua Ben Khamsa Jameleddine. 2024. “Defining and Grading an Obstructive Ventilatory Impairment: American Thoracic Society European Respiratory Society Interpretive Strategies of 2005 Versus 2022”. Asian Journal of Medicine and Health 22 (2):61-71. https://doi.org/10.9734/ajmah/2024/v22i2984.

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