RT Journal Article SR Electronic T1 FEV1 as a Standalone Spirometric Predictor and the Attributable Fraction for Death in Older Persons JF Respiratory Care FD American Association for Respiratory Care SP 217 OP 226 DO 10.4187/respcare.07012 VO 65 IS 2 A1 Carlos A Vaz Fragoso A1 Peter H Van Ness A1 Gail J McAvay YR 2020 UL http://rc.rcjournal.com/content/65/2/217.abstract AB BACKGROUND: Commonly used thresholds for staging FEV1 have not been evaluated as standalone spirometric predictors of death in older persons. Specifically, the proportion of deaths attributed to a reduced FEV1, when staged by commonly used thresholds in L, percent of predicted (% pred), and Z scores, has not been previously reported.METHODS: In 4,232 white persons ≥ 65 y old, sampled from the Cardiovascular Health Study, FEV1 was stratified as stage 1 (FEV1 ≥ 2.00 L, ≥80% pred, and Z score ≥−1.64), stage 2 (FEV1 1.50–1.99 L, 50–79%pred, and Z score −2.55 to −1.63), and stage 3 (FEV1 < 1.50 L, < 50% pred, and Z score < −2.55). Notably, a Z score threshold of −1.64 defines normal-for-age lung function as the lower limit of normal (ie, 5th percentile of distribution), and accounts for differences in age, sex, height, and ethnicity. Next, adjusted odds ratios and average attributable fractions for 10-y all-cause mortality were calculated, comparing FEV1 stages 2 and 3 against stage 1, expressed in L, % pred, and Z scores. The average attributable fraction estimates the proportion of deaths attributed to a predictor by combining the prevalence of the predictor with the relative risk of death conferred by that predictor.RESULTS: FEV1 stage 2 and 3 in L, % pred, and Z scores yielded similar adjusted odds ratios of death: 1.40–1.51 for stage 2 and 2.35–2.66 for stage 3. Conversely, FEV1 stages 2 and 3 in L, % pred, and Z scores differed in prevalence: 12.8–28.6% for stage 2 and 6.4–17.5% for stage 3, and also differed in the adjusted average attributable fraction for death: 3.2–6.4% for stage 2 and 4.5–9.1% for stage 3.CONCLUSIONS: In older persons, the proportion of deaths attributed to a reduced FEV1 is best stratified by Z score staging thresholds because these yield a similar relative risk of death but a more age- and sex-appropriate prevalence of FEV1 stage.