Preview of Abstract # 852666 European Respiratory Society Annual Congress 2013 Abstract Number: 852666 Contact/Presenting Author: Dr. Rupert Jones Department/Institution: Primary Care, Pensinsula School of Medicine and Dentistry Address: 1 Davy Rd (N21) City/State/Zip/Country: Plymouth, Devon, PL6 8BX, United Kingdom Phone: 00447974975389 00447974975389 FREE Fax: Email: rupert.jones@pms.ac.ukDate of Birth (dd/mm/yyyy): 18/04/1955 Is the presenting author a Medical Doctor (MD)? Yes ERS Membership Number: Other Memberships: None Indicated Abstract Group: 1.6. General Practice and Primary Care Keyword 1: COPD - management Keyword 2: Primary care Keyword 3: Exacerbation PRESENTATION TYPE: No preference selected. You have only applied for the grants and/or sponsorships displayed below: General Conflicts of Interests: The Presenting Author has the following, real or perceived, conflicts of interest that relate to this abstract. The study was sponsored by the International Primary Care Respiratory Group Tobacco-Industry related conflict of interests: I have NO relationship of any kind with the tobacco industry (since 1/1/2000) nor will have a link to the tobacco industry before the event to which I have been invited by the ERS to participate in Title: A comparison of multi-component indices of COPD severity in primary care: an UNLOCK study from the IPCRG Dr. Rupert Jones, rupert.jones@pms.ac.uk, MD1, David Price, david@respiratoryresearch.org, MD2, Niels Chavannes, N.H.Chavannes@lumc.nl, MD3, Prof. Amanda Lee, a.j.lee@abdn.ac.uk4, Elizabeth Gabe-Thomas, E.G.Thomas@bath.ac.uk1, Bjorn Stallberg, b.stallberg@salem.mail.telia.com, MD5, Karin Lisspers, k.lisspers@alfa.telenordia.se, MD5 and Josefin Sundh, josefin.sundh@orebroll.se6. 1Peninsula School of Medicine and Dentistry, University of Plymouth, Plymouth, United Kingdom; 2Centre of Academic Primary Care, University of Aberdeen, Aberdeen, United Kingdom; 3Department of Public Health and Primary Care, Leiden University Medical Centre, Leiden, Netherlands; 4Medical Statistics Team, University of Aberdeen, Aberdeen, United Kingdom, AB25 2ZD; 5Department of Public Health and Caring Sciences, Uppsala University, Uppsala, Sweden and 6School of Health and Medical Science, Orebro University, Orebro, Sweden. Body: Objective: To compare the DOSE and ADO indices with a range of outcomes across multiple COPD populations, as gauges of COPD severity. Design: Real-life observational cohort study. Study population: 5486 primary care COPD patients : 4400 in the Optimal Patient Care database; 370 in Devon UK; 154 in a pulmonary rehabilitation programme rehabilitation in Holland; 562 in PRAXIS-study, Sweden. Main outcome measures: DOSE and ADO associations with CCQ and SGRQ; current and future exacerbations and hospital admissions and mortality. Results: Both DOSE and ADO indices inversely correlated with CCQ and SGRQ (p<0.001), DOSE was stronger across all items and with healthcare consumption markers (treatment-defined exacerbations, out of hours general practitioner visits and hospital admissions). DOSE, but not ADO, predicted future exacerbations and admissions. Both indices predicted mortality, ADO was the stronger of the two. Table 1: Rank correlations of DOSE and ADO indices with health status, exacerbations and future hospital admissions Study Outcome Measure DOSE index P-value ADO index P-value Bocholtz (n=154) Health Status (CCQ score) -0.55 <0.001 -0.41 <0.001 PRAXIS-cohort (n=562) Health Status (CCQ score) -0.71 <0.001 -0.62 <0.001 Devon Audit (n=370) Current exacerbations 0.52 <0.001 0.08 0.127 OPC (n=4400) Current exacerbations 0.47 <0.001 0.10 <0.001 OPC (n=4400) Future hospital admissions 0.09 <0.001 0.04 0.004 Conclusions: The DOSE index is better than the ADO index for predicting a wide range of outcomes in a diversity of COPD patients. The DOSE index is suitable a tool in routine clinical practice to identify those with current symptoms and future risk of exacerbations, admissions and mortality