(Press-News.org) BIRMINGHAM, Ala. – The diagnosis of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, or COPD, is improved by incorporating CT lung imaging and respiratory symptoms. This fresh, multidimensional approach better identifies patients who are at risk of poor respiratory outcomes, while ruling out those who have airflow obstruction without respiratory symptoms or structural lung disease, Surya Bhatt, M.D., and colleagues report in the Journal of the American Medical Association.
“This new COPD diagnostic schema, which includes chest imaging, respiratory symptoms and spirometry, identified additional individuals at risk of poor respiratory outcomes,” said Bhatt, a professor in the Department of Medicine at the University of Alabama at Birmingham Marnix E. Heersink School of Medicine and director of the Center for Lung Analytics and Imaging Research.
The schema includes airflow obstruction on spirometry as the major criterion and minor criteria based on chest imaging and respiratory symptoms. Imaging includes visual signs of emphysema and airway wall thickening on computed tomography, and symptom-based criteria consider difficulty breathing, reduced quality of life and the presence of chronic bronchitis. Under the new framework, a patient must have airflow obstruction and at least one minor criterion or, in the absence of airflow obstruction or if lung function tests are not available, at least three of five minor criteria.
Bhatt and colleagues found that, among 9,416 participants enrolled in a multicenter cohort, those newly diagnosed with COPD by the schema had greater all-cause and respiratory-specific mortality, more frequent exacerbations, and faster lung function decline compared with people classified as not having COPD based on the new classification. This new diagnostic schema included additional individuals with high respiratory morbidity and excluded some with airflow obstruction who had no symptoms or evidence of structural lung disease.
Before this study, clinicians had increasingly recognized that lung function tests did not capture all aspects of the complex heterogeneous disease COPD, a leading cause of disability and death. Some 392 million people globally, and 16 million in the United States, are estimated to have COPD.
“This new diagnostic schema will likely change the way we diagnose COPD and enable its diagnosis, even in the absence of overt airflow obstruction on spirometry,” Bhatt said. “Whether treating individuals newly diagnosed this way will result in improved outcomes remains to be tested, but practitioners have already been using imaging and symptoms to diagnose COPD. This new schema sets some parameters to operationalize this.”
In an editorial in JAMA, Francesca Polverino, M.D., Ph.D., called the study a milestone in COPD diagnosis. “COPD classification has remained overly dependent on airflow limitation as the main diagnostic criterion,” Polverino wrote. “What truly sets this reclassification apart is its groundbreaking assertion that airflow obstruction is no longer a requirement for a COPD diagnosis.”
In the system proposed by Bhatt and colleagues, airflow obstruction remains the major criterion for COPD. “However, what makes this model significantly more inclusive and reflective of clinical COPD diversity are the minor criteria, which are split between imaging and symptom-based factors,” said Polverino, a professor at the Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, Texas.
Bhatt is corresponding author of the study, “A new multidimensional diagnostic approach for chronic obstructive pulmonary disease,” and Edwin K. Silverman, M.D., Ph.D., Brigham and Women’s Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts, and James D. Crapo, M.D., National Jewish Health, Denver, Colorado, are co-senior authors. Other UAB authors include Mark Dransfield and Sandeep Bodduluri, UAB Department of Medicine Division of Pulmonary, Allergy and Critical Care Medicine; and Arie Nakhmani, UAB School of Engineering Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering.
The study includes 52 authors from 24 universities and institutions in the United States and Canada.
At UAB, Bhatt works in the Division of Pulmonary, Allergy and Critical Care Medicine.
END
A fresh, multidimensional diagnosis for COPD identifies at-risk patients previously missed
The JAMA article is potentially practice-changing by enabling a diagnosis of COPD in individuals without airflow obstruction
2025-08-12
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Rice geoscientist honored with Geological Society of America’s Woollard Award
2025-08-12
Richard Gordon, the W.M. Keck Foundation Professor of Geophysics, Earth, Environmental and Planetary Sciences at Rice University, has been named the 2025 recipient of the George P. Woollard Award from the Geological Society of America (GSA). The award recognizes a career of outstanding contributions to geology through the application of geophysical principles and techniques. Gordon’s work has transformed our understanding of global plate motions and plate boundary deformation.
“This is a special honor for me,” Gordon said. “Some of the past recipients have been mentors, close colleagues ...
Historically redlined areas face disparities in emergency medical access and serious consequences for patients, new study finds
2025-08-12
August 12, 2025 — A new study published in JAMA Network Open reveals that the legacy of redlining—a discriminatory housing policy from the 1930s—is associated with inequities in rapid access to emergency medical services (EMS) today. These disparities in prehospital care can have serious consequences for patients experiencing life-threatening conditions such as major trauma, stroke, cardiac arrest, or septic shock.
The nationwide study found that communities once labeled as “hazardous” (Grade D) on historical Home Owners’ Loan Corporation (HOLC) maps are significantly ...
Pew awards 22 researchers biomedical science grants
2025-08-12
PHILADELPHIA—The Pew Charitable Trusts today announced the 22 researchers joining the Pew Scholars Program in the Biomedical Sciences. These early-career scientists will receive four years of funding to uncover fundamental insights about human health and disease.
“For 40 years, Pew has supported young, talented researchers as they take creative approaches to solving big scientific questions,” said Donna Frisby-Greenwood, Pew’s senior vice president for Philadelphia and scientific advancement. ...
5 Pew-Stewart scholars selected to pursue pioneering cancer research
2025-08-12
PHILADEPHIA—The Pew Charitable Trusts and the Alexander and Margaret Stewart Trust announced today the 2025 class of the Pew-Stewart Scholars Program for Cancer Research.
The five early-career scientists will each receive four-year grants to conduct innovative research projects spanning cancer development, diagnosis, and treatment. This is the 12th year the Alexander and Margaret Stewart Trust has partnered with Pew to support promising cancer researchers.
“Cancer continues to have a profound impact on the lives of so many, but scientific advancements hold hope for improving how we ...
Pew supports 10 Latin American fellows pursuing scientific advances
2025-08-12
PHILADELPHIA—The Pew Charitable Trusts today announced the 2025 class of the Pew Latin American Fellows Program in the Biomedical Sciences.
The 10 postdoctoral fellows from five Latin American countries—Argentina, Bolivia, Brazil, Chile, and Mexico—will receive two years of funding to conduct research in laboratories throughout the United States. They will work under the mentorship of prominent biomedical scientists, including alumni from the Latin American fellows program and the Pew Scholars Program in the Biomedical Sciences.
“Scientific ...
Portable spectroscopy enables detection of vaginal microbes
2025-08-12
Vaginal health is tightly linked to the balance of bacteria in the microbiome, especially certain species of Lactobacillus. When this balance is disturbed—a condition known as dysbiosis—it can lead to increased risk of infections, complications during pregnancy, and other long-term health concerns. Despite this risk, existing diagnostic methods often fall short, especially in detecting Lactobacillus iners, an important vaginal bacterium, which doesn't always show up under a microscope or in lab cultures. Researchers at Vanderbilt University are ...
Ultrafast untethered levitation device utilized squeeze film for omni-directional transport
2025-08-12
Advances in technology have led to the miniaturization of many mechanical, electronic, chemical and biomedical products, and with that, an evolution in the way these tiny components and parts are transported is necessary to follow. Transport systems, such as those based on conveyor belts, suffer from the challenge of friction, which drastically slows the speed and precision of small transport. Researchers from YOKOHAMA National University addressed this issue by developing an untethered levitation device capable of moving in all directions. The frictionless design ...
Cancer cells can evade anti-cancer drugs by entering and surviving within bone marrow fibroblasts
2025-08-12
In a recently published study, researchers at Fox Chase Cancer Center revealed for the first time that cancer cells can evade anti-cancer drugs by entering and surviving within bone marrow fibroblasts, a phenomenon they describe as “cell-in-cell.”
The results of this five-year study, led by Y. Lynn Wang, MD, PhD, FCAP, a Professor and physician-scientist in the Department of Pathology and the Cell Signaling and Microenvironment Research Program at Fox Chase, could mark a major change in the treatment of chronic lymphocytic leukemia ...
Clarifying medical images using next-level pixel-particle analogy
2025-08-12
WASHINGTON, Aug. 12, 2025 – Medical imaging methods such as ultrasound and MRI are often affected by background noise, which can introduce blurring and obscure fine anatomical details in the images. For clinicians who depend on medical images, background noise is a fundamental problem in making accurate diagnoses.
Methods for denoising have been developed with some success, but they struggle with the complexity of noise patterns in medical images and require manual tuning of parameters, adding complexity to the denoising process.
To solve the denoising problem, some researchers have drawn inspiration from quantum mechanics, which describes how matter and energy behave at the ...
What exactly is Long COVID? New UCLA research shows the answer depends on whom you ask
2025-08-12
What is Long COVID? Despite hundreds of published studies and millions affected worldwide, the medical field still lacks a clear answer.
New research from UCLA finds that the definition of Long COVID varies so widely across published studies that the percentage of people identified as having the condition can differ dramatically, making it harder to treat patients and advance research.
The study, published August 12 in JAMA Network Open, highlights just how much the lack of a standard definition is clouding our understanding of Long COVID.
“The findings highlight the need for ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
The ISSCR and STEMCELL Technologies partner to launch free, on-demand course on standards for human stem cell use in research
Women with Down syndrome may develop Alzheimer’s disease more rapidly than men
Study: Long COVID remains a substantial financial and medical burden
Mount Sinai receives $4 million grant from American Cancer Society to launch Cancer Health Research Center
Tan to conduct investigation of ferroelectric oxides as heterogeneous photocatalysts for ethane dehydrogenation
Sun to study software vulnerability detection & remediation
Study uncovers alarming anxiety rates among autistic college students
ETSU researchers discover 5-million-year-old deer fossils
A fresh, multidimensional diagnosis for COPD identifies at-risk patients previously missed
Rice geoscientist honored with Geological Society of America’s Woollard Award
Historically redlined areas face disparities in emergency medical access and serious consequences for patients, new study finds
Pew awards 22 researchers biomedical science grants
5 Pew-Stewart scholars selected to pursue pioneering cancer research
Pew supports 10 Latin American fellows pursuing scientific advances
Portable spectroscopy enables detection of vaginal microbes
Ultrafast untethered levitation device utilized squeeze film for omni-directional transport
Cancer cells can evade anti-cancer drugs by entering and surviving within bone marrow fibroblasts
Clarifying medical images using next-level pixel-particle analogy
What exactly is Long COVID? New UCLA research shows the answer depends on whom you ask
Work impairment and financial outcomes among adults with vs without long COVID
Hospital financial health and provision of obstetric and neonatal intensive care unit services
Studying terrestrial rocks to prepare techniques for Mars
Tiny ants crack the secret to perfect teamwork
Scientists find a microbial molecule that restores liver and gut health
Regulation of the temperature stability in ordered olivine microwave dielectric ceramics with low-loss for dielectric resonant antenna
Core-cladding-like phosphor ceramics wafer: a path to ultra-high luminance
Exercise may slow epigenetic aging
RSNA AI challenge models can independently interpret mammograms
Embargoed study: Breaking the link between alcohol use and pancreatic cancer
Why common blood pressure readings may be misleading – and how to fix them
[Press-News.org] A fresh, multidimensional diagnosis for COPD identifies at-risk patients previously missedThe JAMA article is potentially practice-changing by enabling a diagnosis of COPD in individuals without airflow obstruction