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LUNG DISEASE UNDIAGNOSED IN FOUR OUT OF FIVE
Four out of five adults with long-term lung disease - which is usually
caused by smoking - do not know they have it.
Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (COPD) which includes chronic
bronchitis and emphysema goes undiagnosed in 80 per cent of people who
suffer from it according to a new report by Cancer Research UK published
online today in Thorax.
This condition is strongly associated with lung cancer because both
arise from long-term damage to lung tissue caused by smoking. Lung
cancer patients very often have COPD.
Researchers studied the results of saliva and lung function tests and
questionnaires from 8215 adults over 35 years old. They were able to
identify 1093 people with COPD based on impaired lung function but more
than 80 per cent of those with the disease said they had not received
diagnosis of any kind. And even among those with severe COPD more than
half had not been diagnosed.
More than one third of those with COPD were still smoking and a further
35 per cent were ex-smokers. Sufferers were more likely to be
older, manual workers, male and more socio-economically deprived than
those without the disease.
The study found that smokers who had COPD showed higher levels of
dependence on cigarettes and smoked more cigarettes a day than smokers
without the disease. But those with COPD were no more motivated to quit
than smokers without the disease.
Study author Professor Robert West, director of tobacco studies at
Cancer Research UK’s health behavioural unit, said: “It is crucial
to identify smokers with COPD and take urgent action to support them in
stopping smoking because the most effective way of halting the
progression of the disease is to stop smoking.
“Many smokers feel that they will ‘get away with it’ and not be
affected in a serious way by their habit. For smokers with COPD that
doubt is removed. Every day they continue to smoke will make things
worse.
“The US Lung Health study has already shown that smokers with mild to
moderate COPD can be helped to stop smoking with appropriate treatment
and this improves lung function and mortality rates.
“Symptoms of COPD are having a smokers’ cough or being a bit
breathless on exertion. But many smokers think these are “normal”
symptoms of smoking and do not realise that they can be the beginnings
of a disease which, in many cases, will leave them disabled or dead if
they do not stop smoking. It only requires a simple lung function test
to find out whether they have COPD and this can be done by their GP.”
Dr Lesley Walker, director of cancer information at Cancer Research UK,
said: “Smokers run the biggest risk of COPD but we also
know it can affect people who have never smoked as well as those who
have given up smoking. And there is a real need to increase public
awareness of this insidious disease.
“Diagnosis of COPD can be done at primary care level. And smokers who
are diagnosed at an early stage of the disease would benefit most from
quitting smoking and should be targeted in the surgery. GPs can help
patients to quit through smoking cessation clinics and nicotine
replacement therapy.”
(20/9/06)
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