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Domiciliary Cough Monitoring for the Prediction of COPD Exacerbations.

Authors :
Crooks, Michael G.
den Brinker, Albertus C.
Thackray-Nocera, Susannah
van Dinther, Ralph
Wright, Caroline E.
Morice, Alyn H.
Source :
Lung. Apr2021, Vol. 199 Issue 2, p131-137. 7p.
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Introduction: Acute exacerbations of COPD (AE-COPD) are a leading cause of health service utilisation and are associated with morbidity and mortality. Identifying the prodrome of AE-COPD by monitoring symptoms and physiological parameters (telemonitoring) has proven disappointing and false alerts limit clinical utility. We report objective monitoring of cough counts around AE-COPD and the performance of a novel alert system identifying meaningful change in cough frequency. Methods: This prospective longitudinal study of cough monitoring included chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) patients experienced in telemonitoring that had two or more AE-COPD in the past year. Participants underwent cough monitoring and completed a daily questionnaire for 90 days. The automated system identified deteriorating trends in cough and this was compared with alerts generated by an established telemonitoring questionnaire. Results: 28 patients [median age 66 (range 46–86), mean FEV-1% predicted 36% (SD 18%)] completed the study and had a total of 58 exacerbations (43 moderate and 15 severe). Alerts based on cough monitoring were generated mean 3.4 days before 45% of AE-COPD with one false alert every 100 days. In contrast, questionnaire-based alerts occurred in the prodrome of 88% of AE-COPD with one false alert every 10 days. Conclusion: An alert system based on cough frequency alone predicted 45% AE-COPD; the low false alert rate with cough monitoring suggests it is a practical and clinically relevant tool. In contrast, the utility of questionnaire-based symptom monitoring is limited by frequent false alerts. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
03412040
Volume :
199
Issue :
2
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Lung
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
149866538
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00408-021-00435-9