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Novel Respiratory Disability Score Predicts COPD Exacerbations and Mortality in the Spiromics Cohort

Authors :
Eric A. Hoffman
Jerry A. Krishnan
Wanda K. O'Neal
Robert Paine
Miguel Quibrera
Catherine A. Meldrum
R. Graham Barr
Russell P. Bowler
Stephen P. Peters
Mark T. Dransfield
Jeffrey L. Curtis
Stephen C. Lazarus
Fernando J. Martinez
Richard E. Kanner
Nadia N. Hansel
MeiLan K. Han
David Couper
Carlos H. Martinez
G.J. Criner
Christopher B. Cooper
Prescott G. Woodruff
Source :
International Journal of Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease. 15:1887-1898
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Informa UK Limited, 2020.

Abstract

Author(s): Cooper, Christopher B; Paine, Robert; Curtis, Jeffrey L; Kanner, Richard E; Martinez, Carlos H; Meldrum, Catherine A; Bowler, Russell; O'Neal, Wanda; Hoffman, Eric A; Couper, David; Quibrera, Miguel; Criner, Gerald; Dransfield, Mark T; Han, MeiLan K; Hansel, Nadia N; Krishnan, Jerry A; Lazarus, Stephen C; Peters, Stephen P; Barr, R Graham; Martinez, Fernando J; Woodruff, Prescott G; SPIROMICS investigators | Abstract: RationaleSome COPD patients develop extreme breathlessness, decreased exercise capacity and poor health status yet respiratory disability is poorly characterized as a distinct phenotype.ObjectiveTo define respiratory disability in COPD based on available functional measures and to determine associations with risk for exacerbations and death.MethodsWe analyzed baseline data from a multi-center observational study (SPIROMICS). This analysis includes 2332 participants (472 with severe COPD, 991 with mild/moderate COPD, 726 smokers without airflow obstruction and 143 non-smoking controls).MeasurementsWe defined respiratory disability by ≥4 of 7 criteria: mMRC dyspnea scale ≥3; Veterans Specific Activity Questionnaire l5; 6-minute walking distance l250 m; St George's Respiratory Questionnaire activity domain g60; COPD Assessment Test g20; fatigue (FACIT-F Trial Outcome Index) l50; SF-12 l20.ResultsUsing these criteria, respiratory disability was identified in 315 (13.5%) participants (52.1% female). Frequencies were severe COPD 34.5%; mild-moderate COPD 11.2%; smokers without obstruction 5.2% and never-smokers 2.1%. Compared with others, participants with disability had more emphysema (13.2 vs. 6.6%) and air-trapping (37.0 vs. 21.6%) on HRCT (Pl0.0001). Using principal components analysis to derive a disability score, two factors explained 71% of variance, and a cut point -1.0 reliably identified disability. This disability score independently predicted future exacerbations (s=0.34; CI 0.12, 0.64; P=0.003) and death (HR 2.97; CI 1.54, 5.75; P=0.001). Thus, participants with disability by this criterion had almost three times greater mortality compared to those without disability.ConclusionOur novel SPIROMICS respiratory disability score in COPD was associated with worse airflow obstruction as well as airway wall thickening, lung parenchymal destruction and certain inflammatory biomarkers. The disability score also proved to be an independent predictor of future exacerbations and death. These findings validate disability as an important phenotype in the spectrum of COPD.

Details

ISSN :
11782005
Volume :
15
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
International Journal of Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........ab778e892329bad2700ae3be02598ca7
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.2147/copd.s250191