Summary: | Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) is an under-diagnosed and life-threatening progressive disease. Early symptoms of COPD include excessive sputum production and chronic cough. The primary risk factor of this disease in the western world is smoking. COPD is confirmed by spirometry, which does not totally reveal reversible airway obstruction. This study, conducted mainly in the Northern Finland, aimed to assess 1) smoking habits and smoking cessation in healthy middle-aged and young adults, 2) the prevalence of COPD and role of spirometry and prolonged respiratory symptoms in the diagnosis of COPD of smoking middle-aged adults, 3) the association of symptoms of chronic bronchitis with smoking habits in young adult males, and 4) to seek and to identify new potential biomarkers related to early COPD using non-hypothesis driven non-biased proteomics. A two-year prospective study included two visits to evaluate symptoms in healthy cigarette smokers, to screen new COPD cases and to assess the success of smoking cessation using motivational counselling and pharmacological therapies. In addition, a quantitative cross-sectional questionnaire survey was conducted in 1163 male conscripts during their military service in Northern Finland. A lung tissue proteomic approach was used to identify new COPD biomarkers. Spirometry revealed COPD by GOLD criteria in 11,0% and by national criteria in 15.3 % of originally asymptomatic chronic smokers. Further, chronic cough or sputum production was detected in 62.0% of the participants. After two years, 23.3% of adults had succeeded in quitting smoking. In young adults, 46.5% were daily smokers. The prevalence of self-reported chronic cough and sputum production was high in daily smokers (40.7%). The majority (60.2%) of the daily young smokers had made quit attempts and 46.9% of them had used nicotine replacement therapy (NRT). Based on the lung tissue proteomics, surfactant protein A (SP-A) was one of the most highly elevated spots in the COPD lung. The plasma SP-A ...
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