A Race-neutral Approach to the Interpretation of Lung Function Measurements

Cole Bowerman(Dalhousie University), Nirav R. Bhakta(University of California, San Francisco), Danny J. Brazzale(Austin Hospital), Brendan R. Cooper(University Hospitals Birmingham NHS Foundation Trust), Julie Cooper(University Hospitals Birmingham NHS Foundation Trust), Laura Gochicoa‐Rangel(Instituto Nacional de Enfermedades Respiratorias), Jeffrey M Haynes(Elliot Hospital), David A. Kaminsky(University of Vermont), Le Thi Tuyet Lan(University of Medicine and Pharmacy at Ho Chi Minh City), Refiloe Masekela(University of KwaZulu-Natal), Meredith C. McCormack(Johns Hopkins University), Irene Steenbruggen(Isala), Sanja Stanojevic(Dalhousie University)
American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine
November 16, 2022
Cited by 344

Abstract

Abstract Rationale The use of self-reported race and ethnicity to interpret lung function measurements has historically assumed that the observed differences in lung function between racial and ethnic groups were because of thoracic cavity size differences relative to standing height. Very few studies have considered the influence of environmental and social determinants on pulmonary function. Consequently, the use of race and ethnicity-specific reference equations may further marginalize disadvantaged populations. Objectives To develop a race-neutral reference equation for spirometry interpretation. Methods National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES) III data (n = 6,984) were reanalyzed with sitting height and the Cormic index to investigate whether body proportions were better predictors of lung function than race and ethnicity. Furthermore, the original GLI (Global Lung Function Initiative) data (n = 74,185) were reanalyzed with inverse-probability weights to create race-neutral GLI global (2022) equations. Measurements and Main Results The inclusion of sitting height slightly improved the statistical precision of reference equations compared with using standing height alone but did not explain observed differences in spirometry between the NHANES III race and ethnic groups. GLI global (2022) equations, which do not require the selection of race and ethnicity, had a similar fit to the GLI 2012 “other” equations and wider limits of normal. Conclusions The use of a single global spirometry equation reflects the wide range of lung function observed within and between populations. Given the inherent limitations of any reference equation, the use of GLI global equations to interpret spirometry requires careful consideration of an individual’s symptoms and medical history when used to make clinical, employment, and insurance decisions.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis