Journal article
Lung function trajectory and biomarkers in the tasmanian longitudinal health study
DS Bui, A Agusti, H Walters, C Lodge, JL Perret, A Lowe, G Bowatte, R Cassim, GS Hamilton, P Frith, A James, PS Thomas, D Jarvis, MJ Abramson, R Faner, SC Dharmage
Erj Open Research | Published : 2021
Abstract
Background and objective Different lung function trajectories through life can lead to COPD in adulthood. This study investigated whether circulating levels of biomarkers can differentiate those with accelerated (AD) from normal decline (ND) trajectories. Methods The Tasmanian Longitudinal Health Study (TAHS) is a general population study that measured spirometry and followed up participants from ages 7 to 53 years. Based on their forced expiratory volume in 1 s (FEV1) trajectories from age 7 to 53 years, this analysis included those with COPD at age 53 years (60 with AD and 94 with ND) and controls (n=720) defined as never-smokers with an average FEV1 trajectory. Circulating levels of selec..
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Awarded by GlaxoSmithKline