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Browsing by Author "Valipour, Arschang (56769376500)"

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    Publication
    GOLD 2017 on the way to a phenotypic approach? Analysis from the phenotypes of COPD in central and Eastern Europe (POPE) cohort
    (2017)
    Tudoric, Neven (6603790593)
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    Koblizek, Vladimir (16042779500)
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    Miravitlles, Marc (57203200679)
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    Valipour, Arschang (56769376500)
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    Milenkovic, Branislava (23005307400)
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    Barczyk, Adam (7005260870)
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    Somfay, Attila (6602531232)
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    Zykov, Kirill (26538429700)
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    Kostov, Kosta (8069820400)
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    Zbozinkova, Zuzana (56166644000)
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    Svoboda, Michal (57143798800)
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    Sorli, Jurij (58709711200)
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    Krams, Alvils (35083681100)
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    Tkacova, Ruzena (56276834900)
    [No abstract available]
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    Inhaled therapies in patients with moderate COPD in clinical practice: Current thinking
    (2018)
    Ariel, Amnon (57200042235)
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    Altraja, Alan (6602329360)
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    Belevskiy, Andrey (36681967600)
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    Boros, Piotr W. (56522806000)
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    Danila, Edvardas (25631755800)
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    Fležar, Matjaz (6701546511)
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    Koblizek, Vladimir (16042779500)
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    Fridlender, Zvi G. (6603043691)
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    Kostov, Kosta (8069820400)
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    Krams, Alvils (35083681100)
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    Milenkovic, Branislava (23005307400)
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    Somfay, Attila (6602531232)
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    Tkacova, Ruzena (56276834900)
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    Tudoric, Neven (6603790593)
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    Ulmeanu, Ruxandra (6701714089)
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    Valipour, Arschang (56769376500)
    COPD is a complex, heterogeneous condition. Even in the early clinical stages, COPD carries a significant burden, with breathlessness frequently leading to a reduction in exercise capacity and changes that correlate with long-term patient outcomes and mortality. Implementation of an effective management strategy is required to reduce symptoms, preserve lung function, quality of life, and exercise capacity, and prevent exacerbations. However, current clinical practice frequently differs from published guidelines on the management of COPD. This review focuses on the current scientific evidence and expert opinion on the management of moderate COPD: the symptoms arising from moderate airflow obstruction and the burden these symptoms impose, how physical activity can improve disease outcomes, the benefits of dual bronchodilation in COPD, and the limited evidence for the benefits of inhaled corticosteroids in this disease. We emphasize the importance of maximizing bronchodilation in COPD with inhaled dual-bronchodilator treatment, enhancing patient-related outcomes, and enabling the withdrawal of inhaled corticosteroids in COPD in well-defined patient groups. © 2018 Ariel et al.
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    RETRO-POPE: A Retrospective, Multicenter, Real-World Study of All-Cause Mortality in COPD
    (2023)
    Koblizek, Vladimir (16042779500)
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    Milenkovic, Branislava (23005307400)
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    Svoboda, Michal (57143798800)
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    Kocianova, Jana (57192413280)
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    Holub, Stanislav (57212551840)
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    Zindr, Vladimir (24077740100)
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    Ilic, Miroslav (36572055600)
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    Jankovic, Jelena (57211575577)
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    Cupurdija, Vojislav (24830441800)
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    Jarkovsky, Jiri (55627730800)
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    Popov, Boris (58732694400)
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    Valipour, Arschang (56769376500)
    Purpose: The Phenotypes of COPD in Central and Eastern Europe (POPE) study assessed the prevalence and clinical characteristics of four clinical COPD phenotypes, but not mortality. This retrospective analysis of the POPE study (RETRO-POPE) investigated the relationship between all-cause mortality and patient characteristics using two grouping methods: clinical phenotyping (as in POPE) and Burgel clustering, to better identify high-risk patients. Patients and Methods: The two largest POPE study patient cohorts (Czech Republic and Serbia) were categorized into one of four clinical phenotypes (acute exacerbators [with/without chronic bronchitis], non-exacerbators, asthma–COPD overlap), and one of five Burgel clusters based on comorbidities, lung function, age, body mass index (BMI) and dyspnea (very severe comorbid, very severe respiratory, moderate-to-severe respiratory, moderate-to-severe comorbid/obese, and mild respiratory). Patients were followed-up for approximately 7 years for survival status. Results: Overall, 801 of 1,003 screened patients had sufficient data for analysis. Of these, 440 patients (54.9%) were alive and 361 (45.1%) had died at the end of follow-up. Analysis of survival by clinical phenotype showed no significant differences between the phenotypes (P=0.211). However, Burgel clustering demonstrated significant differences in survival between clusters (P>0.001), with patients in the “very severe comorbid” and “very severe respiratory” clusters most likely to die. Overall survival was not significantly different between Serbia and the Czech Republic after adjustment for age, BMI, comorbidities and forced expiratory volume in 1 second (hazard ratio [HR] 0.80, 95% confidence interval [CI] 0.65–0.99; P=0.036 [unadjusted]; HR 0.88, 95% CI 0.7–1.1; P=0.257 [adjusted]). The most common causes of death were respiratory-related (36.8%), followed by cardiovascular (25.2%) then neoplasm (15.2%). Conclusion: Patient clusters based on comorbidities, lung function, age, BMI and dyspnea were more likely to show differences in COPD mortality risk than phenotypes defined by exacerbation history and presence/absence of chronic bronchitis and/or asthmatic features. © 2023, Dove Medical Press Ltd. All rights reserved.

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