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Associations of oxygenated hemoglobin with disease burden and prognosis in stable COPD: Results from COSYCONET

Authors :
Trudzinski, F.C.
Jörres, R.A.
Alter, P.
Kahnert, K.
Waschki, B.
Herr, C.
Kellerer, C.
Omlor, A.
Vogelmeier, C.F.
Fähndrich, S.
Watz, H.
Welte, T.
Jany, B.
Söhler, S.
Biertz, F.
Herth, F.
Kauczor, H.-U.
Bals, R.
Andreas, Stefan
Behr, Jürgen
Bewig, Burkhard
Buhl, Roland
Ewert, Ralf
Stubbe, Beate
Ficker, Joachim H.
Gogol, Manfred
Grohé, Christian
Hauck, Rainer
Held, Matthias
Henke, Markus
Höffken, Gerd
Katus, Hugo A.
Kirsten, Anne-Marie
Koczulla, Rembert
Kenn, Klaus
Kronsbein, Juliane
Kropf-Sanchen
Lange, Christoph
Zabel, Peter
Pfeifer, Michael
Randerath, Winfried J.
Seeger, Werner
Studnicka, Michael
Taube, Christian
Teschler, Helmut
Timmermann, Hartmut
Virchow, J. Christian
Wagner
Wirtz, Hubert
Source :
Scientific Reports, Vol 10, Iss 1, Pp 1-11 (2020), Scientific Reports
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Nature Publishing Group, 2020.

Abstract

We studied whether in patients with stable COPD blood gases (BG), especially oxygenated hemoglobin (OxyHem) as a novel biomarker confer information on disease burden and prognosis and how this adds to the information provided by the comorbidity pattern and systemic inflammation. Data from 2137 patients (GOLD grades 1–4) of the baseline dataset of the COSYCONET COPD cohort were used. The associations with dyspnea, exacerbation history, BODE-Index (cut-off ≤2) and all-cause mortality over 3 years of follow-up were determined by logistic and Cox regression analyses, with sex, age, BMI and pack years as covariates. Predictive values were evaluated by ROC curves. Capillary blood gases included SaO2, PaO2, PaCO2, pH, BE and the concentration of OxyHem [haemoglobin (Hb) x fractional SaO2, g/dL] as a simple-to-measure correlate of oxygen content. Inflammatory markers were WBC, CRP, IL-6 and -8, TNF-alpha and fibrinogen, and comorbidities comprised a broad panel including cardiac and metabolic disorders. Among BG, OxyHem was associated with dyspnoea, exacerbation history, BODE-Index and mortality. Among inflammatory markers and comorbidities, only WBC and heart failure were consistently related to all outcomes. ROC analyses indicated that OxyHem provided information of a magnitude comparable to that of WBC, with optimal cut-off values of 12.5 g/dL and 8000/µL, respectively. Regarding mortality, OxyHem also carried independent, additional information, showing a hazard ratio of 2.77 (95% CI: 1.85–4.15, p 8000/µL was 2.33 (95% CI: 1.60–3.39, p 2. It thus appears well suited for clinical use with minimal equipment, especially for GPs.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20452322
Volume :
10
Issue :
1
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Scientific Reports
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....144f5cf544e03e98eaa6d5621148243e
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-020-67197-x