TY - JOUR T1 - Quality of life in smokers: focus on functional limitations rather than on lung function? JF - British Journal of General Practice JO - Br J Gen Pract SP - 477 LP - 482 VL - 57 IS - 539 AU - Roeland MM Geijer AU - Alfred PE Sachs AU - Theo JM Verheij AU - Huib AM Kerstjens AU - Marijke M Kuyvenhoven AU - Arno W Hoes Y1 - 2007/06/01 UR - http://bjgp.org/content/57/539/477.abstract N2 - Background The Global Initiative for Chronic Obstructive Lung Disease (GOLD) classification of severity of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) is based solely on obstruction and does not capture physical functioning. The hypothesis that the Medical Research Council (MRC) dyspnoea scale would correlate better with quality of life than the level of airflow limitation was examined.Aim To study the associations between quality of life in smokers and limitations in physical functioning (MRC dyspnoea scale) and, quality of life and airflow limitation (GOLD COPD stages).Design Cross-sectional study.Setting The city of IJsselstein, a small town in the centre of The Netherlands.Method Male smokers aged 40–65 years without a prior diagnosis of COPD and enlisted with a general practice, participated in this study. Quality of life was assessed by means of a generic (SF–36) and a disease-specific, questionnaire (QOLRIQ).Results A total of 395 subjects (mean age 55.4 years, pack years 27.1) performed adequate spirometry and completed the questionnaires. Limitations of physical functioning according to the MRC dyspnoea scale were found in 25.1 % (99/395) of the participants and airflow limitation in 40.2% (159/395). The correlations of limitations of physical functioning with all quality-of-life components were stronger than the correlations of all quality-of-life subscales with the severity of airflow limitation.Conclusion In middle-aged smokers the correlation of limitations of physical functioning (MRC dyspnoea scale) with quality of life was stronger than the correlation of the severity of airflow limitation with quality of life. Future staging systems of severity of COPD should capture this and not rely on forced expiratory volume in one second (FEV1) alone. ER -