COPD Diagnosis and Management: A Practical Guide to the GOLD Framework

Clinical Practice Update — ABE Classification, Eosinophil-Guided ICS, Triple Therapy, Biologics, and the 2026 Disease Activity Concept

This is an original clinical education article informed by current guidelines and evidence. See References below for source documents.

MDA-COPD-2026·15 min read
Clinical Focus
Spirometric diagnosis, ABE assessment, initial pharmacotherapy, eosinophil-guided ICS escalation, triple therapy, biologics for refractory COPD, and non-pharmacological management
Target Audience
Internists, primary care physicians, pulmonologists, residents, nurse practitioners, respiratory therapists
Setting
Primary care, pulmonary clinic, emergency department, hospital inpatient
Source Evidence
  • GOLD 2025 Report — Global Strategy for Prevention, Diagnosis and Management of COPD (November 2024)
  • GOLD 2026 Report Update — Disease Activity Concept, Lowered Group E Threshold, Biologics Evidence
  • NICE Guideline [NG115] — Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease in Over 16s (2018, updated 2019)
  • Key Trials: IMPACT (Triple Therapy, NEJM 2018), ETHOS (Triple Therapy, NEJM 2020), BOREAS (Dupilumab, NEJM 2023)

Key Clinical Takeaways

The most important actionable points from this Practice Update on COPD diagnosis and management, reflecting the GOLD 2025/2026 framework.

COPD diagnosis and management practical guide showing ABE classification and eosinophil-guided treatment escalation per GOLD framework
Overview of the GOLD ABE assessment and pharmacotherapy approach for COPD in adults.
  1. 1Confirm COPD with post-bronchodilator spirometry: FEV1/FVC <0.7 is required. Pre-bronchodilator FEV1/FVC <0.7 is highly suggestive and can guide case-finding in primary care. → Making the Diagnosis
  2. 2Classify every patient using the ABE framework: symptoms (mMRC/CAT) and exacerbation history determine whether they are Group A, B, or E → ABE Classification
  3. 3Bronchodilators are foundational — start LAMA+LABA for most symptomatic patients. Unlike asthma, ICS is not first-line. → Initial Pharmacotherapy
  4. 4Check blood eosinophils — they guide ICS decisions: ≥300 cells/μL favours ICS addition; <100 cells/μL argues against ICS → The Role of Eosinophils
  5. 5Triple therapy (LAMA+LABA+ICS) reduces exacerbations and mortality versus dual bronchodilation in the right patients — the IMPACT and ETHOS trials confirmed this → Escalation to Triple Therapy
  6. 6The GOLD 2026 report lowers the Group E threshold to ≥1 moderate or severe exacerbation in the past year, signalling earlier treatment intensification → What Changed in GOLD 2026
  7. 7Dupilumab is the first biologic with evidence in COPD — for patients still exacerbating on triple therapy with eosinophils ≥300 and chronic bronchitis → Beyond Triple Therapy
  8. 8Smoking cessation remains the single most impactful intervention — pharmacotherapy doubles long-term quit rates → Non-Pharmacological Management
  9. 9Offer pulmonary rehabilitation to all symptomatic patients regardless of GOLD grade — it improves exercise capacity, dyspnoea, and quality of life → Non-Pharmacological Management
  10. 10Vaccinate all COPD patients: influenza, pneumococcal, COVID-19, RSV, and a single dose of Tdap if not previously received → Non-Pharmacological Management

How Should You Diagnose COPD?

COPD should be suspected in any adult over 35 with chronic dyspnoea, cough, or sputum production and a relevant exposure history (typically ≥20 pack-years of smoking, but also biomass fuel, occupational dust, or early-life respiratory events). Spirometry is essential — clinical features alone are insufficient to make the diagnosis.

1

Perform post-bronchodilator spirometry to confirm COPD. A fixed ratio of FEV1/FVC <0.70 after bronchodilator administration establishes the diagnosis of persistent airflow limitation. GOLD 2025 additionally emphasises that pre-bronchodilator FEV1/FVC <0.70 is highly indicative and can be used for case-finding where post-bronchodilator testing is not readily available.

Strong RecHigh EvidenceGOLD 2025
2

Measure a blood eosinophil count (CBC with differential) at diagnosis. This is used later to guide ICS decisions, not to make the COPD diagnosis itself. Because eosinophils are genetically stable, a single measurement is usually sufficient.

Strong RecModerate EvidenceGOLD 2025
3

Check alpha-1 antitrypsin level in patients diagnosed at a young age (<45), those with a strong family history, or those with severe disease disproportionate to exposure history. This is a once-in-a-lifetime test.

Strong RecModerate EvidenceGOLD 2025
4

Do not routinely use bronchodilator reversibility testing to make therapeutic decisions. Reversibility in COPD is variable and does not reliably predict response to bronchodilators or ICS.

AgainstModerate EvidenceGOLD 2025
Clinical Pearl: GOLD 2025 emphasises that incidental findings on low-dose chest CT (e.g., emphysema, airway thickening) should prompt COPD investigation even in patients without classic symptoms. This is particularly relevant in lung cancer screening populations.

Which Patients Get Which Initial Treatment?

Initial pharmacotherapy is determined by the GOLD ABE classification, which was introduced in the 2023 revision and carried forward into GOLD 2025 and 2026. It replaces the former ABCD scheme by merging groups C and D into a single Group E (for “exacerbation”) to underscore that exacerbation history drives treatment intensity regardless of symptom burden.

Initial Pharmacotherapy by ABE Group: A Practical Decision Guide

GroupCriteriaInitial TreatmentEosinophil ConsiderationPractical Tips
ALow symptoms (mMRC 0–1 or CAT <10) + 0–1 moderate exacerbations, no hospitalisationA single bronchodilator: LAMA or LABANot relevant at this stageLAMA preferred if any exacerbation risk — tiotropium has the strongest evidence. Can use LABA if LAMA not tolerated.
BHigh symptoms (mMRC ≥2 or CAT ≥10) + 0–1 moderate exacerbations, no hospitalisationDual bronchodilation: LAMA + LABA (preferably single inhaler)Not relevant at this stageMost newly diagnosed symptomatic patients fall here. Single-inhaler LAMA/LABA improves adherence.
EAny symptom burden + ≥2 moderate exacerbations OR ≥1 hospitalisation in past year (GOLD 2025). GOLD 2026 lowers to ≥1 moderate or severe exacerbation.LAMA + LABA. Consider LAMA + LABA + ICS if eosinophils ≥300 cells/μL.Eos ≥300: start with triple therapy. Eos <300: start with LAMA+LABA, add ICS later if exacerbations persist and eos ≥100.These patients need aggressive early treatment. Check inhaler technique and adherence at every visit.
  • Prescribe rescue short-acting bronchodilators (SABA or SAMA) for all patients for immediate symptom relief.
  • LABA+ICS without a LAMA is not recommended as initial therapy in COPD — always include a LAMA when ICS is used.
Important
Unlike asthma, ICS is not foundational therapy in COPD. Bronchodilators are first-line. ICS should only be added when guided by eosinophil counts and exacerbation history. Inappropriate ICS use increases the risk of pneumonia without necessarily improving outcomes.

When and How Should You Escalate Treatment?

Escalation decisions are driven by two questions: Is the patient still symptomatic? Is the patient still exacerbating? Blood eosinophils determine whether ICS is the right escalation or whether non-ICS strategies (azithromycin, roflumilast) are more appropriate.

5

Escalate to LAMA+LABA+ICS (triple therapy) for patients on LAMA+LABA who continue to exacerbate and have blood eosinophils ≥100 cells/μL. Evidence strongly favours ICS addition when eosinophils are ≥300 cells/μL.

Strong RecHigh EvidenceGOLD 2025IMPACT 2018ETHOS 2020
6

For patients on LAMA+LABA who continue to exacerbate but have blood eosinophils <100 cells/μL, do not add ICS. Instead, consider adding azithromycin (in non-smokers) or roflumilast (if FEV1 <50% predicted and chronic bronchitis phenotype).

Moderate RecModerate EvidenceGOLD 2025
7

Consider dupilumab as add-on to triple therapy for patients who continue to exacerbate, have blood eosinophils ≥300 cells/μL, and a chronic bronchitis phenotype. The BOREAS and NOTUS trials showed approximately 30% reduction in moderate-to-severe exacerbations with improved lung function.

Moderate RecModerate EvidenceGOLD 2025BOREAS 2023
8

Avoid withdrawing ICS in patients with blood eosinophils >300 cells/μL due to the increased risk of exacerbations. ICS withdrawal may be considered in clinically stable patients with infrequent exacerbations and eosinophils <300, with gradual tapering and close monitoring.

Strong RecModerate EvidenceGOLD 2025
Clinical Pearl: Before escalating pharmacotherapy for persistent exacerbations, always check three things first: inhaler technique (incorrect in up to 70% of patients), medication adherence, and whether the patient is still smoking. These are the most common — and most fixable — reasons for treatment failure.

Clinical Decision Pathway

Managing Stable COPD: 5 Questions
Question 1: Is the diagnosis confirmed by spirometry?
Post-bronchodilator FEV1/FVC <0.70 → COPD confirmed. Classify airflow severity: GOLD 1 (≥80%), GOLD 2 (50–79%), GOLD 3 (30–49%), GOLD 4 (<30%).
FEV1/FVC ≥0.70 → COPD unlikely. Consider asthma, heart failure, or other causes of dyspnoea.
Question 2: What is the ABE group?
Low symptoms + few exacerbations → Group A → Single bronchodilator (LAMA or LABA).
High symptoms + few exacerbations → Group B → LAMA + LABA.
History of significant exacerbations → Group E → LAMA + LABA; add ICS if eosinophils ≥300.
Question 3: Is the patient still exacerbating on current therapy?
On LAMA+LABA with eosinophils ≥100 → Escalate to LAMA+LABA+ICS.
On LAMA+LABA with eosinophils <100 → Add azithromycin (non-smokers) or roflumilast (FEV1 <50%, chronic bronchitis).
On triple therapy with eosinophils ≥300 and chronic bronchitis → Consider dupilumab or mepolizumab.
Question 4: Is the patient still breathless despite optimal bronchodilation?
Check and optimise inhaler technique and adherence. Implement or escalate pulmonary rehabilitation. Consider switching inhaler device. GOLD 2025 positions ensifentrine (PDE3/4 inhibitor) as a potential add-on for persistent dyspnoea.
Question 5: Has the non-pharmacological foundation been addressed?
Smoking cessation: counselling + pharmacotherapy (varenicline, NRT, or bupropion). Vaccinations up to date. Pulmonary rehabilitation offered. Long-term oxygen if PaO2 ≤55 mmHg or SpO2 ≤88%.

Monitoring and Follow-Up

ParameterWhenWhy It MattersCommon Pitfalls
SpirometryAt least annuallyIdentifies rapid decliners (>40 mL/year FEV1 loss) who may need treatment intensificationNot performing annual spirometry — many patients are only tested at diagnosis
Symptom assessment (mMRC/CAT)Every visitTracks symptom trajectory and guides treatment adjustmentRelying on clinician impression instead of validated tools
Exacerbation historyEvery visitDetermines ABE group and escalation decisionsPatients underreport exacerbations — ask specifically about courses of oral steroids or antibiotics
Inhaler techniqueEvery visitPoor technique is the most common correctable cause of treatment failureAssuming the patient knows how to use their inhaler — demonstrate and check back every time

Evidence in Context

What Changed From GOLD 2025 to GOLD 2026?

The 2026 report lowers the Group E exacerbation threshold from ≥2 moderate or ≥1 severe to ≥1 moderate or severe exacerbation in the past year. It formally introduces “disease activity” as a therapeutic target, recognising that achieving a low-activity state improves prognosis. A new chapter on artificial intelligence in COPD detection and management was added. Evidence supporting biologics (dupilumab, mepolizumab) is now presented in a dedicated figure.

Where GOLD and NICE Agree and Differ

Agreement: Both use the fixed ratio FEV1/FVC <0.70 for diagnosis, recommend LAMA+LABA as first-line for symptomatic patients, emphasise smoking cessation and pulmonary rehabilitation, and support ICS escalation guided by eosinophils and exacerbation frequency.

Differences: NICE NG115 uses a slightly different classification and suggests considering asthma-COPD overlap more explicitly. NICE recommends LAMA+LABA+ICS when asthma features or steroid responsiveness are suspected, whereas GOLD ties ICS decisions more tightly to eosinophil thresholds. NICE does not yet include guidance on biologics (dupilumab) or ensifentrine.

The Trials Behind Triple Therapy and Biologics

The IMPACT trial (2018) randomised over 10,000 patients and showed that fluticasone furoate/umeclidinium/vilanterol (triple therapy) reduced moderate-to-severe exacerbations by 25% versus LAMA+LABA and by 15% versus LABA+ICS. ETHOS (2020) confirmed these findings with budesonide/glycopyrrolate/formoterol, showing a 24% reduction versus LAMA+LABA and a signal towards reduced all-cause mortality. Both trials enrolled patients with a history of exacerbations and roughly 40% had elevated eosinophils. BOREAS (2023) was the first trial to show a biologic reduces COPD exacerbations — dupilumab reduced moderate-to-severe exacerbations by approximately 30% in patients with type 2 inflammation on triple therapy.

What We Still Don’t Know

Initial triple therapy: No RCT has directly evaluated starting triple therapy in newly diagnosed COPD patients. GOLD 2025 acknowledges this gap while still suggesting it for Group E with eosinophils ≥300 as a “practical recommendation.”
Eosinophil thresholds in prospective studies: No RCT has prospectively randomised patients based on blood eosinophil count to validate the ≥100 and ≥300 thresholds for ICS decisions. Current thresholds are derived from post-hoc subgroup analyses.
Long-term biologic data: Dupilumab and mepolizumab data in COPD extend only to 52 weeks. Long-term safety, durability of effect, and the ability to prevent disease progression are unknown.

References

  1. 1.Global Initiative for Chronic Obstructive Lung Disease. Global Strategy for Prevention, Diagnosis and Management of COPD: 2025 Report. goldcopd.org/2025-gold-report/
  2. 2.Agustí A, Celli BR, Criner GJ, et al. Global Initiative for Chronic Obstructive Lung Disease 2023 Report: GOLD Executive Summary. Eur Respir J. 2023;61(4):2300239. doi:10.1183/13993003.00239-2023
  3. 3.Lipson DA, Barnhart F, Brealey N, et al. Once-Daily Single-Inhaler Triple versus Dual Therapy in Patients with COPD (IMPACT). N Engl J Med. 2018;378(18):1671–1680. doi:10.1056/NEJMoa1713901
  4. 4.Rabe KF, Martinez FJ, Ferguson GT, et al. Triple Inhaled Therapy at Two Glucocorticoid Doses in Moderate-to-Very-Severe COPD (ETHOS). N Engl J Med. 2020;383(1):35–48. doi:10.1056/NEJMoa1916046
  5. 5.Bhatt SP, Rabe KF, Hanania NA, et al. Dupilumab for COPD with Type 2 Inflammation Indicated by Eosinophil Counts (BOREAS). N Engl J Med. 2023;389(3):205–214. doi:10.1056/NEJMoa2303951
  6. 6.National Institute for Health and Care Excellence. Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease in over 16s: diagnosis and management [NG115]. 2018, updated 2019. nice.org.uk/guidance/ng115

How to Read the Evidence Tags

Every recommendation carries two tags. These are Medaptly’s own simplified interpretations for educational clarity.

Recommendation Strength

TagMeaningIn Practice
Strong RecBenefits clearly outweigh risks.Standard practice.
Moderate RecEvidence favours benefit.Most patients should receive this.
Conditional RecRight choice depends on individual.Shared decision-making.
AgainstRisks outweigh benefits.Avoid.

Evidence Quality

TagMeaningConfidence
High EvidenceMultiple RCTs or meta-analyses.Very confident.
Moderate EvidenceSingle RCT or large observational studies.Reasonably confident.
Low EvidenceExpert consensus or small studies.May change.

These are Medaptly’s simplified interpretations. Consult original documents in References for full details.

Article Information

For Educational Purposes Only. This is original clinical education content informed by current published guidelines and clinical evidence. It does not constitute medical advice, is not endorsed by GOLD, NICE, or any other organisation, and does not replace individualised clinical judgement, institutional protocols, or local formulary guidance. Drug dosages should always be verified against current prescribing information before prescribing. Readers are encouraged to consult the original source guidelines listed in the References section for the full evidence review and complete recommendation sets.

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