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When disease discriminates: Women and COPD
Newswise — Women have made a good deal of
welcome progress in the last several
decades, but at least one advance is
unwanted: chronic obstructive pulmonary
disease (COPD) is on the rise in women in
prevalence, morbidity and mortality.
By 2000, the number of women dying from COPD
surpassed the number of men. But the rising
number of cases in women has not been
matched by medical understanding of the
disease’s apparent gender-bias.
“The disease expression of COPD in women is
different than in men,” says Fernando
Martinez, M.D., professor of internal
medicine at the University of Michigan and
senior author on the review, which appears
in the second issue for December of the
American Journal of Respiratory and Critical
Care Medicine, published by the American
Thoracic Society. “The main reason that we
did this study was to highlight that there
really are gender differences in the
disease, and that they require additional
study.”
Dr. Martinez and his colleagues assessed the
state of medical and scientific knowledge on
gender and COPD and found some consistent
patterns. Not only are the manifestations of
the disease different in men and women, but
the risk factors, symptoms, disease,
progression, and even diagnosis, are
markedly different between the sexes.
COPD actually comprises what used to be
considered two distinct diseases: emphysema,
or an abnormality in the lung tissue, and
chronic bronchitis, an obstruction of the
airways. One of the major gender differences
in the manifestation of COPD is that women
tend to develop more airway obstruction,
whereas men tend to develop a more
emphysematic manifestation of the disease.
But why that is so is still unclear.
“It may reflect differences in exposures, or
[genetic] differences in how males and
females manifest damage,” said Dr. Martinez.
“Or it may have nothing to do with
underlying genetic differences that are
gender-based.”
Women also seem to more prone than men to
developing COPD from their exposures to risk
factors, such as cigarette smoke and smoke
from biomass fuels used for cooking in many
developing regions of the world. Ironically,
a number of studies have also shown that
female smokers have a harder time quitting
and remaining tobacco-free than males.
Because COPD can develop over decades, a
significant portion of current cases can be
traced back to a rising smoking epidemic
among women that began in the 1950s.
Women may be more susceptible to developing
COPD from their exposures, but they also
predominate among COPD patients who have
never smoked, and may have gender-linked
genetic factors that predispose them to
developing the disease.
And once sick, women also have different
experiences than men. They are less likely
to be correctly diagnosed or offered
appropriate diagnostic tests for COPD. They
report more severe shortness of breath, more
anxiety and depression. And according to
some studies, they report having a lower
quality of life because of their disease.
The fact that COPD differs between men and
women is undisputed. But answering questions
as to how and why, Dr. Martinez emphasizes,
is critical in advancing the medical and
scientific understanding of the disease. How
do men and women differ in exposures and
other risk factors? Are the differences
biological or behavioral? How do exposure
patterns affect their susceptibility to
developing the disease and its
manifestation? Why does COPD progress more
swiftly in women? Do outcomes differ because
of gender bias in diagnosis, physiological
differences, or phenotypic differences in
their disease?
“Whatever the question, whether it is about
the biological nature of the disease or
clinical impact of therapeutic studies, you
have to have a gender analysis,” says Dr.
Martinez. “It’s an absolutely crucial
parameter. Appropriate gender analysis has
to be taken into account because it may be
instrumental in allowing you to interpret
what you’re trying to study.”
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