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When GETomics meets aging and exercise in COPD

Journal

RESPIRATORY MEDICINE
Volume 216, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

W B SAUNDERS CO LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.rmed.2023.107294

Keywords

Bronchitis; Development; Emphysema; Smoking; Spirometry

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The term GETomics refers to the concept that human health and disease are the result of dynamic gene-environment interactions occurring throughout a person's lifetime. This approach has led to a dramatic shift in our understanding of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), as it is not solely caused by smoking and affects both genders and different age groups. By applying a GETomics approach, new perspectives on the relationship between COPD, exercise limitation, and aging can be gained.
The term GETomics has been recently proposed to illustrate that human health and disease are actually the final outcome of many dynamic, interacting and cumulative gene (G) - environment (E) interactions that occur through the lifetime (T) of the individual. According to this new paradigm, the final outcome of any GxE interactions depends on both the age of the individual at which such GxE interaction occurs as well as on the previous, cumulative history of previous GxE interactions through the induction of epigenetic changes and immune memory (both lasting overtime). Following this conceptual approach, our understanding of the pathogenesis of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) has changed dramatically. Traditionally believed to be a self-inflicted disease induced by tobacco smoking occurring in older men and characterized by an accelerated decline of lung function with age, now we understand that there are many other risk factors associated with COPD, that it occurs also in females and young individuals, that there are different lung function trajectories through life, and that COPD is not always characterized by accelerated lung function decline. In this paper we discuss how a GETomics approach to COPD may open new perspectives to better understand its relationship with exercise limitation and the ageing process.

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