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Disproportionate impairment in diffusing capacity predicts pulmonary hypertension with an elevated pulmonary vascular resistance in COPD
Disproportionate impairment in diffusing capacity predicts pulmonary hypertension with an elevated pulmonary vascular resistance in COPD
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Disproportionate impairment in diffusing capacity predicts pulmonary hypertension with an elevated pulmonary vascular resistance in COPD
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Disproportionate impairment in diffusing capacity predicts pulmonary hypertension with an elevated pulmonary vascular resistance in COPD
Disproportionate impairment in diffusing capacity predicts pulmonary hypertension with an elevated pulmonary vascular resistance in COPD

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Disproportionate impairment in diffusing capacity predicts pulmonary hypertension with an elevated pulmonary vascular resistance in COPD
Disproportionate impairment in diffusing capacity predicts pulmonary hypertension with an elevated pulmonary vascular resistance in COPD
Journal Article

Disproportionate impairment in diffusing capacity predicts pulmonary hypertension with an elevated pulmonary vascular resistance in COPD

2026
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Overview
BackgroundCurrent guidelines for the evaluation of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) do not recommend screening for pulmonary hypertension (PH), despite the high prevalence and impact on outcomes. A simple screening tool to identify patients with an elevated pulmonary vascular resistance (PVR) is urgently needed, as they may benefit from PH-specific therapy and more urgent referral for lung transplantation.Research questionWe sought to examine whether a ratio of forced expiratory volume in 1 s (FEV1) to diffusing capacity (DLCO) predicts haemodynamic patterns in COPD.Study design and methodsIndividuals with COPD who underwent right heart catheterisation from two academic medical centres were included. Adjusted multinomial models tested associations between FEV1/DLCO and haemodynamic patterns. Receiver operating curves were generated to assess the discriminative performance of the FEV1/DLCO ratio in predicting PH with an elevated PVR.ResultsApproximately 40% of the 411 individuals included had PH with an elevated PVR. For every 0.1 increase in the FEV1/DLCO ratio, there was a 12–14% increased rate of PH with an elevated PVR compared with No PH. FEV1/DLCO ratio had moderate discriminative performance (C-statistic 0.68–0.72), which was strengthened when combined in a model with elevated tricuspid regurgitant jet velocity on echocardiography (C-statistic 0.78–0.82). Above a threshold of 1.4, FEV1/DLCO demonstrated good specificity (75%) in predicting PH with an elevated PVR.InterpretationThese findings suggest that disproportionate reductions in DLCO predict PH with an elevated PVR in a COPD population. The FEV1/DLCO ratio should be considered in the evaluation of PH in COPD.