Gold Guideline Presentation
Gold Guideline Presentation
Gold Guideline Presentation
Diptta Bhattacharjee
Chronic Obstructive IMO ,medicine dept
Pulmonary Disease. CIMCH
What's new !
The GOLD report is revised annually and has been used worldwide by healthcare professionals as a tool to implement
effective management programs based on local healthcare systems.
i.Chapter 3 and Chapter 4 have been consolidated into one chapter to reduce repetitive information
ii. Some tables have been consolidated to remove repetition; all table and figure numbers have been changed to
consecutive figure numbers only.
iii. Information about PRISm (preserved ratio but impaired spirometry) has been expanded
iv. In the Spirometry section further clarification about pre-bronchodilator spirometry has been added.
vi. Vaccination Recommendations for people with COPD have been updated in line with current guidance from the US
Centers for Disease Control (CDC).
vii. Managing Inhaled Therapy has been expanded and includes information on a patient’s Ability to use the Delivery
System Correctly and Choice of Inhaler Device
viii. A new section on Pharmacotherapies for Smoking Cessation has been added
DEFINITION:
• Tobacco smoking
• Toxic particles and gases from house
RISK FACTORS INCLUDE: • Outdoor air pollution
• Host factors- abnormal lung development
Spirometry
Repeat spirometry at interval
CAT assessment
PULMONARY REHABILITATION:
• In patients with stable COPD and Moderate resting or exercise induced arterial
desaturation, prescription of long- term oxygen therapy does not lengthen time to death or
first hospitalization or provide sustained benefit in health status.
• Resting oxygenation at sea level does not exclude the development of severe hypoxemia
during travelling by air .
VENTILATORY SUPPORT NPPV may improve hospitalization free survival in selected patients after recent
hospitalization, particularly in
those with pronounced persistent daytime hypercapnia (PaCO2> 53 mmhg)
In patients with severe chronic hypercapnia and a history of hospitalization for acute
respiratory failure, long term
noninvasive ventilation may be considered.
Long term
oxygen therapy
LTOT is indicated for stable patients who have :
LABA+LAMA+ICS
• Smoking cessation
• Pulmonary rehabilitation
• Long term oxygen therapy(LTOT)
• Non- invasive positive pressure ventilation
(NPPV)
• Lung volume reduction surgery
Bronchodilators in stable COPD
• Inhaled bronchodilators in COPD are central to symptom management and commonly given on a regular basis to prevent
or reduce symptoms .
• Inhaled bronchodilators are recommended over oral bronchodilators .
• Regular and as needed use of SABA or SAMA improves FEV1 and symptoms .
• Combinations of SABA and SAMA are superior compared to either medication alone in improving FEV1 and symptoms.
• LABA and LAMA are preferred over short acting agents except for patients with only occasional dyspnea and for
immediate relief of symptoms in patients already on long -acting bronchodilators for maintenance therapy.
• LABA and LAMA significantly improve lung function , dyspnea , health status , and reduce exacerbation rates .
• LAMAs have a greater evidence of on exacerbation reduction compared with LABAs and decrease hospitalizations.
• When initiating treatment with long -acting bronchodilators the preferred choice is a combination of LABA + LAMA. In
patients with persistence dyspnea on a single long -acting bronchodilator treatment should be escalated to two .
• Combination treatment with a LABA and a LAMA increases FEV1 and reduces symptoms compared to monotherapy .
• Combination treatment with LABA+ LAMA reduces exacerbations compared to monotherapy.
Anti-inflammatory
therapy in stable
COPD
• Inhaled corticosteroids
• Oral glucocorticoids
• PDE4 inhibitors ( Roflumilast)
• Antibiotics
• Mucoregulators and anti-oxidant agents
• Other anti-inflammatory – statin therapy
Alpha -1 anti-trypsin augmentation
therapy
Antitussives
Other
Vasodilators
pharmacological
treatments
Opioids
Hemodynamic
Need for invasive
instability – need for
mechanical ventilation.
vasopressors.
Indications for Noninvasive Mechanical Ventilation
(NIV)
At least one of the following :
Cardiovascular
Ischaemic heart Peripheral vascular
diseases (CVD) Heart failure Arrythmias Hypertension Lung cancer
disease (IHD) disease
Metabolic
Gastroesophageal Periodontitis and Obstructive sleep
Anemia Osteoporosis
reflux (GERD)
syndrome and
dental hygiene apnea and insomnia
Bronchiectasis
diabetes
message. impact.