Abstract
Introduction:
It is expected that by the fourth decade of the 21st century, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) will become the third leading cause of death worldwide. These data require awareness among treating physicians of these patients.
Material and Methods:
A pilot study was conducted from January 2020 - December 2022 in a South American health institution in which cardiovascular risk was estimated using GLOBORISK and ATP-III criteria. Data derived from the metabolic profile included in the ATP-III criteria were collected. Quantitative variables are presented as mean ± standard deviation or median (interquartile range) according to their distribution and qualitative variables as percentages. Student's t-test was performed to evaluate differences between two variables. All statistical analyses were performed with (SPSS for Windows, v.22.1; Chicago, IL).
Results:
The present study showed that metabolic syndrome variables in these patients were elevated. Male sex was 77% and female 23%, smoking 61%. The GLOBORISK equation found mostly patients with low to moderate cardiovascular risk. It was found that there was a higher cardiovascular risk in those patients with FEV1 less than 30%, showing a statistical correlation of this alteration for the GLOBORISK scale.
Conclusions:
This is the first pilot study that estimates cardiovascular risk using GLOBORISK in the COPD population. We consider integrating national and international networks to compare the results found here.