Objective: COPD treatment guidelines are available worldwide, yet it is not known how widely they are followed. This study evaluated the clinical care of COPD patients in Japan as compared to guideline recommendations.

Methods: A sample of general and specialist physicians was selected from private outpatient clinics and public hospitals in Japan. Physicians were provided two clinical vignettes (COPD and asthma) and asked to make a diagnosis. They were next asked to define diagnostic tests and treatment recommendations specifically for a COPD patient. Responses were compared to recommendations from current COPD guidelines.

Results: For the COPD unknown vignette, 6.2% of physicians diagnosed COPD while 54% diagnosed chronic bronchitis or emphysema. For COPD diagnosis, 81.9% of physicians recommended a CXR, 49.1% spirometry, and 17.7% a computed tomography scan. The most frequently recommended medication for a newly diagnosed COPD patient was theophylline (37.2%) followed by expectorants (32.1%) and inhaled anticholinergics (25.9%). Inhaled beta-agonists were recommended by fewer than 20% of all physicians.

Conclusion: Care for COPD patients by selected Japanese physicians diverges from published practice guidelines. COPD is an infrequently used diagnostic label; diagnostic evaluation is characterized by a high use of computed tomography scans, particularly by specialists; and bronchodilator use was low.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1440-1843.2005.00717.xDOI Listing

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