Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (COPD)
NICE guideline [NG115] Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease in over 16s: diagnosis and management. Last updated: Jul 2019.
Background Information
Definitions
COPD
- Common lung condition characterised by persistent respiratory symptoms and airflow obstruction that is typically progressive and not fully reversible.
- COPD is the umbrella term that includes chronic bronchitis and emphysema, which often coexist:
- Chronic bronchitis
- Clinical diagnosis defined by cough and sputum production for at least 3 months per year, for 2 consecutive years
- Emphysema
- Pathological diagnosis referring to irreversible enlargement and destruction of airspaces distal to terminal bronchioles
- Chronic bronchitis
COPD exacerbation / AECOPD
- Episodes of acute worsening of COPD symptoms (e.g., increased breathlessness, cough), beyond normal day-to-day variations.
Epidemiology
Age of onset: typically 40-50 y/o [Ref]
Prevalence: ~6-7% of adults >40 y/o [Ref]
Aetiology
COPD Risk Factors
Exogenous (Environmental)
- Smoking (Major risk factor)
- Cigarette smoking → ~ 90% of cases
- Risk also ↑ with pipes, cigars, marijuana & passive smoking
- Occupational exposures (~20% of COPD cases overall)
- Dusts: coal, grains, silica
- Fumes/chemicals: welding fumes, isocyanates, PAHs
- Air pollution (i.e., biomass fuels)
- Early-life exposures
- In utero → maternal smoking
- Childhood → severe respiratory infections, passive smoke
Endogenous (Host/Intrinsic)
- Genetic factors
- Alpha-1 antitrypsin deficiency (rare but important cause)
- Presents in <45 yrs
- Affects both smokers & non-smokers
- Alpha-1 antitrypsin deficiency (rare but important cause)
- Prematurity → Impaired lung development
- Prematurity
- Asthma
- Independent risk factor for COPD
Red flags for A1AT deficiency–related COPD
-
Younger patients (<45 yrs)
-
Non-smokers or minimal smoking history
-
Family history of early emphysema or liver disease
-
Lower zone/lobe predominant emphysema on imaging
-
COPD plus unexplained liver disease (cirrhosis, hepatitis)
COPD Exacerbation
- Infections (most common trigger) [Ref]
- Respiratory viruses (up to 60%)
- Rhinovirus (most common)
- Other: Influenza, RSV, parainfluenza, coronavirus, adenovirus
- Bacterial (40-60%)
- Most frequently, Haemophilus influenzae, Streptococcus pneumoniae, Moraxella catarrhalis, Pseudomonas aeruginosa
- Respiratory viruses (up to 60%)
- Environmental triggers
- Air pollution (e.g., particulates, NO2, ozone)
- Cold weather / winter seasonality
- Host factors
- Defective mucociliary clearance (smoking damage)
- Immune dysfunction → poor pathogen clearance
Clinical features
COPD
Symptoms
- Chronic cough (often productive, worse in the morning)
- Dyspnoea
- Early → exertional breathlessness
- Advanced → breathlessness at rest
- Wheezing
- Nonspecific
- Fatigue / Reduced exercise tolerance
- Weight loss / Anorexia (advanced, linked to cachexia)
Signs
Early / General
- Tachypnoea / Tachycardia (due to hypoxaemia)
- Pursed-lip breathing
- Prolonged expiratory phase (due to airflow obstruction)
- Cyanosis (esp. in advanced disease)
Advanced
- Barrel chest (↑ anteroposterior diameter of chest in emphysema)
- Cor pulmonale (raised JVP, peripheral oedema, hepatomegaly)
- Cachexia & muscle wasting
COPD itself is not a cause of nail clubbing. If clubbing is present, consider comorbid conditions such as lung cancer, bronchiectasis, or interstitial lung disease, which may coexist with COPD
Examination Findings
Examination may be normal. Potential findings may include:
- Palpation → hyperinflated chest & reduced chest expansion
- Percussion → hyperresonance
- Auscultation
- ↓ breath sounds
- prolonged expiration
- Wheeze and/or crackles
- Signs of cor pulmonale (loud P2, RV heave)
COPD Exacerbation
Symptoms
- Common
- ↑ breathlessness, cough and/or sputum production
- change in sputum colour
- Other
- ↑ wheeze & chest tightness
- URTI symptoms
- Reduced exercise tolerance / increased fatigue
Prognosis
COPD has a variable but generally progressive course, with gradual lung function decline and worsening symptoms over time.
Poor prognostic factors
- Severe airflow limitation (low FEV1)
- High symptom burden (e.g., high MRC dyspnoea scale / CAT scores, poor 6-min walk test)
- Chronic hypoxia / cor pulmonale
- Low BMI, muscle wasting, cachexia
- Frequent / Severe exacerbations
- Current smoking
- Multimorbidity and frailty
Complications
Systemic
- Muscle wasting & cachexia
- Psychological: depression & anxiety (very common)
Respiratory
- ↑ Risk of respiratory infections (esp. pneumonia)
- Pneumothorax → due to rupture of bullae (present in emphysema)
- Respiratory failure
Cardiovascular / Haematological
- Cor pulmonale
- Secondary polycythaemia → compensatory ↑ RBCs due to chronic hypoxia
Oncological
- ↑Lung cancer risk
Severity Classification
COPD severity is classified based on post-bronchodilator FEV1:
| Staging | Post-bronchodilator FEV1 (% of predicted) |
|---|---|
| Stage 1 (mild) | ≥80 % |
| Stage 2 (moderate) | 50-79 % |
| Stage 3 (severe) | 30-49 % |
| Stage 4 (very severe) | <30 % |
Guidelines
Investigation and Diagnosis
NICE recommends suspecting COPD in:
- >35 y/o with a risk factor for COPD (e.g. significant smoking history), and
- Present with ≥1 of the following:
- Exertional dyspnoea
- Chronic cough
- Regular sputum production
- Frequent winter ‘bronchitis’
- Wheeze
Confirmatory test: post-bronchodilator spirometry demonstrating FEV1/FVC <0.7
Standard work-up for all suspected COPD cases:
- Chest X-ray (to exclude other pathologies)
- FBC (to identify anaemia or polycythaemia)
- Measure BMI
Consider serum alpha-1 antitrypsin, sputum cultures, DLCO, and CT thorax on a case-by-case basis
COPD vs Asthma
NICE provided this table to help differentiate between COPD and asthma based on clinical features:
| Clinical feature / factor | COPD | Asthma |
|---|---|---|
| Smoker or ex-smoker | Nearly all | Possibly |
| Symptoms under age 35 | Rare | Often |
| Chronic productive cough | Common | Uncommon |
| Breathlessness | Persistent and progressive | Variable |
| Night-time waking with breathlessness and/or wheeze | Uncommon | Common |
| Significant diurnal or day-to-day variability of symptoms | Uncommon | Common |
When there is diagnostic uncertainty, or both COPD and asthma are present, NICE recommend using the following findings to help identify asthma:
- Large response (FEV1 improvement >400 mL) to bronchodilators
- Large response (FEV improvement >400 mL) to oral prednisolone for 2 weeks
- ≥20% diurnal or day-to-day variability in serial peak flow measurements
Note that in real life, it is very common for COPD and asthma to co-exist, known as Asthma-COPD Overlap Syndrome (ACOS). However, in exams one would be expected to be able to differentiate between COPD and asthma.
COPD Exacerbation Management
Hospital admission is indicated in:
- Severe breathlessness
- Cyanosis
- Arterial pH <7 kPa / Arterial PaO2 <7 kPa / SaO2 <90%
- Worsening peripheral oedema
- ↓ Level of consciousness
- Already receiving LTOT
- Significant comorbidity (esp. cardiac disease and insulin-dependent diabetes)
Patients who do not need to be admitted can be treated as outpatients.
Primary Care (Outpatient) Management
Offer all the following:
- ↑ Frequency or dose of the reliever inhaler (short-acting bronchodilator)
- Oral prednisolone 30mg for 5 days
Do not routinely give antibiotics, only offer if there are signs of infective COPD exacerbation
- Purulent sputum, or
- Increase in sputum volume, or
- Increase in sputum thickness
Secondary Care (Hospital) Management
Initial Therapy
Offer ALL 3 of the following:
| Oxygen therapy | Standard initial controlled oxygen therapy → 88-92% via venturi mask (24-28%) or nasal cannula
Exceptions:
Adjust subsequent oxygen therapy based on ABG results:
|
| Short-acting bronchodilator |
|
| Corticosteroid therapy |
|
Do not routinely give antibiotics, only offer if there are signs of infective COPD exacerbation
- Purulent sputum, or
- Increase in sputum volume, or
- Increase in sputum thickness
1st line: oral amoxicillin / doxycycline / clarithromycin
Further Therapy (By Specialist)
- Theophylline
- Non-invasive ventilation is indicated if respiratory acidosis (pH 7.25-7.35) occurs despite optimal medical therapy
- Doxapram – only indicated if non-invasive ventilation is not suitable
Invasive mechanical ventilation is typically a last resort, indicated if:
- Non-invasive ventilation failed
- pH <7.25
- Cardio-respiratory arrest
Intubation in patients with COPD is approached with caution due to significant risks associated with invasive mechanical ventilation, including ventilator-associated pneumonia, difficulty in weaning, and barotrauma.
Therefore, non-invasive ventilation should be attempted before considering intubation.
Self Management
Patients with a recent exacerbation (≥1 in the last year) who remain at risk are prescribed a ‘rescue pack’ to enable self-management of future exacerbations at home.
Rescue pack includes:
- Oral corticosteroid
- Oral antibiotic (as per local guidance)
COPD Long-Term Management
The main COPD interventions that are well established to improve prognosis are
- Smoking cessation (most effective)
- Pulmonary rehabilitation
- Long-term oxygen therapy
Note that inhaler therapies are used for symptom control and management, with limited impact on long-term prognosis.
Conservative / General Management
- Smoking cessation – most effective intervention for improving COPD prognosis
- Pulmonary rehabilitation – offered to those who are functionally disabled by COPD
- Vaccination
- One-off pneumococcal vaccination
- Annual influenza vaccination
Inhaler Therapy
- Step 1: reliever inhaler with SABA or SAMA
- Step 2: assess for steroid responsiveness to determine step-up therapy
- +ve → add LABA + ICS in addition to reliever inhaler in step 1
- -ve → add LABA + LAMA in addition to reliever inhaler in step 1
- Step 3: add triple therapy (LABA + LAMA + ICS) in addition to reliever inhaler
- Most common: beclometasone + formoterol + glycopyrronium (Trimbow®)
- Fluticasone + umeclidinium + vilanterol (Trellegy Ellipta®)
NICE recommends using combination inhalers (e.g. LABA + LAMA in a single inhaler instead of having to use 2 separate inhalers) to improve adherence.
Do not combine two antimuscarinic inhalers (i.e., SAMA + LAMA). In patients stepping up to LABA + LAMA (without steroid responsiveness), ensure the reliever inhaler is a SABA, not a SAMA.
Examples of some inhaler drugs:
| Drug class | Drug examples |
|---|---|
| SABA | Salbutamol, terbutaline, albuterol |
| LABA | Formoterol, salmeterol |
| SAMA | Ipratropium, oxitropium |
| LAMA | Tiotropium, glycopyrronium, umeclidinium |
Oral Medications
All of the following are initiated by specialists.
Oral theophylline is used if:
- Unable to use inhalers, or
- Inhaler therapy was unsuccessful
Oral roflumilast is used if:
- Severe disease (FEV1 <50%), and
- ≥2 exacerbations in the past 12 months despite triple inhaler therapy
Regular oral azithromycin to prevent infective exacerbations can be offered if:
- Patient stopped smoking, AND
- Referred for pulmonary rehabilitation + optimised non-pharmacological and inhaler therapies, AND
- Has had ≥4 exacerbations with sputum production OR exacerbations resulting in hospitalisation OR prolonged exacerbations with sputum production
Long-Term Oxygen Therapy (LTOT)
Consider LTOT if:
- Patient stopped smoking (or does not smoke), and
- ABG on 2 occasions at least 3 weeks apart shows:
- PaO2 <7.3 kPa, OR
- PaO2 7.3-8.0 PLUS 1 of the 3Ps (secondary polycythaemia, peripheral oedema, pulmonary hypertension)
Duration: If offered, LTOT should be used for at least 15 hours per day
Due to the risk of fire/burns, active smoking or anticipated repeated contact with fire are contraindications for LTOT
Interventional Therapy
| Procedure | Indications |
|---|---|
| Lung volume reduction surgery or endobronchial valves | All the following must be met:
|
| Surgical bullectomy | Considered in patients with large emphysematous bullae (occupying at least 1/3 of the hemithorax) |
| Lung transplantation | All the following must be met:
|
It is more important to understand the different possible procedures and their aims, rather than memorising exact indications.