Article Text
Abstract
Background Evidence-based international guidelines on chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), and their corresponding recommendations, were established to improve individual COPD prognosis, and ultimately to improve survival. The aim of this study was to determine whether the long-term mortality after discharge from a COPD hospitalisation has improved recently, and the effect of co-morbidity treatment in improving COPD prognosis.
Methods In a prospective cohort study design of two cohorts 7 years apart, patients discharged from the same university hospital after a COPD exacerbation were followed-up, and their outcomes compared. Demographic and clinical variables, as well as lung function, were collected with the same protocol by the same investigators. Comprehensive assessments of co-morbidities and treatments were undertaken. Kaplan–Meier survival curves were estimated, and outcomes were compared by means of Cox regression methods.
Results Overall, 135 participants in the 1996–7 cohort and 181 participants in the 2003–4 cohort were studied. Both cohorts were comparable in their baseline demographic and clinical variables, and median follow-up was 439 days. The 3-year mortality was lower in the 2003–4 cohort (38.7%) than in the 1996–7 cohort (47.4%) (p=0.017), and the RR of death after adjustment for gender, age, body mass index, co-morbidities, lung function and mMRC (modified Medical Research Council scale) dyspnoea was 0.66 (95% CI 0.45 to 0.97). Long-term survival improved in the second cohort for patients with COPD with heart failure or cancer (p<0.001).
Conclusions A recent trend towards better prognosis of patients with COPD after hospital discharge is described and is likely to be associated with better management and treatment of COPD and co-morbidities.
- COPD
- mortality
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Introduction
Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) is widely recognised as a major, and growing, cause of mortality and morbidity worldwide.1 Currently COPD accounts for 4.8% of global deaths, and the WHO predicts its mortality burden will increase to 7.9% by 2030.2 Regarding prevalence, at least 1 in 10 adults is identified with COPD in population surveys.3
COPD is currently considered a preventable and treatable disease, in which co-morbidities play a significant role.4 Cardiovascular disease, cancer and other non-respiratory-related diseases occur throughout all severity stages of COPD, and their impact can have significant implications in the long-term prognosis of patients with COPD.5
Until recently only smoking cessation and long-term oxygen therapy in patients with hypoxia were considered as improving survival in patients with COPD. However, new evidence from trials and meta-analyses has emerged suggesting that several respiratory drugs may have an impact on mortality.6–10 It is not known whether these changes modify the overall prognosis after a COPD hospitalisation. COPD admissions usually occur in patients with severe disease, frequent co-morbidities and a poor prognosis.11 12 Clinical insight signalled that a better, holistic management of the patient with COPD and conditions associated with the illness might be related to better individual outcomes, although to the best of our knowledge to date there are no published studies exploring this hypothesis.
The aim of this research was to determine whether the long-term mortality after discharge from a COPD hospitalisation has been reduced recently, and to learn about the effect of co-morbidity treatment in improving COPD prognosis.
Methods
This is a prospective cohort study design, following-up patients discharged from hospital after a COPD exacerbation that required a hospitalisation. The two cohorts of patients were 7 years apart, 1996–2003. All patients were admitted to and discharged from the Hospital Mútua de Terrassa, a 450-bed university hospital in the city of Terrassa, close to Barcelona, Spain.
Inclusion and exclusion criteria
Inclusion and exclusion criteria were the same for both cohorts. Briefly, all consecutive patients admitted for an acute exacerbation of COPD to any medical ward at our institution during the periods October 1996 to May 1997 and June 2003 to September 2004 were studied. Inclusion criteria were: (1) hospitalisation for suspected COPD exacerbation at admission and confirmed at discharge; and (2) forced spirometry showing postbronchodilator forced expiratory volume in 1 s (FEV1)/forced vital capacity (FVC) <0.7 and an FEV1 ≤70% of their reference value, compatible with COPD of at least moderate severity.
The timing of forced spirometry was different for the two cohorts, this being the only protocol change between them. Spirometry was conducted on discharge in the 1996–7 cohort, while it was conducted 1 month after discharge in the 2003–4 cohort. To avoid any potential survival bias due to our protocol change in the timing of spirometry, those patients in the 2003–4 cohort who died between discharge and the scheduled outpatient follow-up visit 1 month later were still included, and lung function data within the previous 6 months were used.
Exclusion criteria were a history of asthma, pneumonia or pulmonary oedema at admission, hospitalisation for causes other than a COPD exacerbation, bronchiectasias as predominant disease, death during hospitalisation or patient refusal to participate in the study. In all cases, the need for hospitalisation was decided upon by the doctors on duty in the Emergency room. The study protocol was approved by the Hospital Research and Ethics Committee, and all subjects gave their written informed consent.
Measurements
Lung function was assessed in the lung function laboratory by means of forced spirometry prebronchodilator test and postbronchodilator test, and reviewed by a chest physician. Spirometry was conducted according to the Spanish SEPAR guidelines, which mirror the American Thoracic Society (ATS)/European Respiratory Society (ERS) guidelines, and severity staging was assessed according to international guidelines.4 13 14 Measurement of arterial blood gases (partial pressure of oxygen and carbon dioxide; Pao2 and Paco2) at rest was made during room air breathing, and the body mass index (BMI) was calculated. Data on the presence of cor pulmonale, use of chronic oxygen therapy, number of admissions for COPD in the previous year and smoking history, as well as all demographic and clinical information, were collected upon admission. On discharge, arterial blood gas measurement was repeated. As detailed elsewhere,11 the following information was collected and questionnaires were completed the day before hospital discharge: (1) number and names of drugs and doses per day taken by the patient at home prior to admission; (2) dyspnoea as assessed with the modified Medical Research Council (mMRC) scale; (3) co-morbidities using the Charlson index15; (4) functional dependence at 2 weeks prior to admission with the Katz Activities of Daily Living Scale16; (5) residential status, as living alone, with relatives or institutionalised; (6) marital status, as currently married or unmarried (including those who were divorced, separated, widowed or never married); and (7) the presence of depression, as recorded by the Yesavage scale in its shortened version, which has 15 yes/no questions.17 Finally, treatments at discharge were also recorded.
Mortality data
After hospital discharge the patients were monitored by their usual doctors, receiving no intervention or follow-up provided by the investigators. Date and cause of death, whenever available, were collected up to 3 years after discharge. The search was carried out by telephoning the patient or family, and/or checking hospital records and the Mortality Register of Catalonia.18 Subjects who could not be located at follow-up and who were not clearly identified as dead were considered as censored after the time of last survival status assessment.
Statistical analysis
Qualitative variables are expressed in percentages, and quantitative variables are summarised as mean±SD, if normality can be assumed, or as median and IQR (25th–75th percentile) to describe time values. The bivariate and multivariate relationship between survival time and covariates was determined with Cox proportional hazards regression models and graphically displayed with Kaplan–Meier curves. For all survival analysis, mortality was considered the dependent variable, and survival time was defined as the interval between hospital discharge and the date of death, or censored at the date of final follow-up for survivors. CIs were calculated for the HR of significant variables. Results were considered statistically significant at p<0.05.
Results
Overall, 379 patients were screened during the two periods, and 329 were included. Six patients (4%) in the first cohort and seven (3.7%) in the second were lost to follow-up (figure 1). Follow-up was available for 316 subjects (296 men and 20 women); of these, 135 participants belong to the 1996–7 cohort and 181 to the 2003–4 cohort.
Mean age of the entire population studied was 72.1 years (SD 9.6). A total of 134 patients (42.4%) were dead 3 years after discharge. Median follow-up was 439 days for deceased patients (IQR 25–75%: 145–775) and 998 days (IQR 25–75%: 921–1088) for surviving patients. Although our study design did not use any matching criteria whatsoever, the two cohorts were comparable in their distribution by age, gender, co-morbidity, functional status and number of hospitalisations or emergency consultation for COPD exacerbation in the previous year (all p>0.05). However the 2003–4 cohort had a lower percentage of non-smoking patients (p=0.02) and higher BMI (p=0.006) (table 1). Mean length of stay was only reduced from 13.5 to 10 days (p<0.001).
Regarding respiratory function, again the two cohorts were similar in most variables with non-significant differences, although the second cohort had on average more severe dyspnoea as measured by the mMRC scale (p=0.03) and lower Pao2 at discharge (p=0.009), with a higher FEV1 expressed as percentage of predicted (45.1% vs 41.4%). However, as mentioned above, spirometry in the 2003–4 cohort was performed 1 month after discharge while for the 1996–7 cohort it was performed immediately before discharge (table 2). Only three patients in the 2003–4 cohort died between discharge and the scheduled outpatient follow-up visit 1 month later. They were still included, and previous lung function data were used. Interestingly, no differences were observed in the number or distribution of specific co-morbidities by cohort (table 3). At discharge the patients of the second cohort received more frequent treatment with long-acting β2 agonists, tiotropium, angiotensin II receptor antagonists, statins and antiplatelet drugs (table 4).
The observed 3-year survival was 52.6% in the 1996–7 cohort and 61.3% in the 2003–4 cohort; these differences were statistically significant (log rank p=0.017, HR 0.811.52, 95% CI 0.68 to 0.96) (figure 2). Mortality causes by cohort are detailed in table 5.
When analysing the association of mortality in patients with COPD and specific co-morbidities between the two cohorts, mortality had decreased in patients with concomitant heart failure (p=0.002) or cancer (p=0.003). These differences by cohort were sustained even after adjustment, in a multivariate model including heart failure or cancer, and both retained independent statistical significance (cohort (p=0.04, HR 1.5, 95% CI 1.07 to 2.1), heart failure (p=0.002; HR 1.76, 95% CI 1.23 to 2.53)) and (cohort (p=0.008, HR 1.6, 95% CI:1.13 to 2.29) and malignancy (p=0.01, HR 2.47, 95% CI 1.43 to 4.25)).
Overall, mortality was lower in the 2003–4 cohort than in the 1996–7 cohort (figure 3), even after adjusting for gender, age, BMI, co-morbidities, lung function and mMRC, (p=0.01, HR 0.66 (95% CI 0.45 to 0.97)) (online supplement 1).
Discussion
Our study concludes that survival in patients after hospital discharge with a COPD exacerbation has significantly improved in recent years, and that this improvement is probably due, at least in part, to a better management of COPD and its associated co-morbidities.
COPD is significantly associated with co-morbidities, an association that is even more common in hospitalised patients.19 In a previous study conducted by our group, patients with a Charlson index of ≥3 were almost twice as likely to die during follow-up than those with lower scores (p <0.005, HR 2.2, 95% CI 1.26 to 3.84).11 In this study heart failure was the most common chronic disease found, and it was also associated with a lower survival rate. Although the current study shows no difference in the distribution of co-morbidities by cohort, it may be noted that the mortality of patients with COPD and heart failure or cancer is lower in the more recent group of patients. This finding is not surprising since the overall prognosis has improved for the most common malignancies.20 21 Similarly, mortality in patients with heart failure has diminished, probably linked to the use of ACE inhibitors, β-blockers, angiotensin receptor inhibitors and statins, as presented elsewhere.22 Of interest, several of these drugs have been associated with improved survival in patients with COPD, suggesting a possible direct benefit due to their anti-inflammatory effect.23 24 In our study, patients of the second cohort were more likely to receive treatment with statins, angiotensin II receptor antagonists or antiplatelet drugs for their co-morbodities. It is reasonable to hope that a more comprehensive approach to COPD together with its co-morbidities may modify the natural course of the disease.25
Until recently COPD was considered an irreversible disease. Existing treatments were considered symptomatic and, apart from oxygen therapy for patients with chronic respiratory failure and smoking cessation, there were no interventions that changed the natural history of the disease or increased survival. This pessimistic view was reflected in the old therapeutic guidelines for the management of COPD, which only recently have changed, identifying a reduction of mortality as a goal and priority.4 13 14
New clinical trials performed in outpatients already hinted at a decrease in mortality of patients with COPD in recent years. For example, the TORCH mortality trial used data derived from the ISOLDE trial,26 conducted 10 years earlier, to calculate its sample size, expecting a 3-year mortality of 17% in the placebo group, a lethality that was higher than that finally observed.7 The TORCH trial as well as INSPIRE, OPTIMAL and UPLIFT7–10 were initiated to assess the usefulness of different respiratory drugs: long-acting β2 agonists, inhaled corticosteroids and tiotropium. They obtained substantial reductions in exacerbations and hospitalisations, and improvements in quality of life; all these variables are directly associated with mortality.11 27 28 However, except for INSPIRE, which showed an unexpectedly significant decrease in mortality in the group randomised to combined salmeterol–fluticasone versus the group randomised to tiotropium, all other trials to date have been unable to find a statistically significant improvement in survival.9 Particularly in TORCH, the only trial designed to evaluate a reduction in mortality, the primary objective of mortality from all causes was 12.6% in the group treated with combined salmeterol–fluticasone versus 15.2% in the placebo group (p=0.052).7 Similarly, in the UPLIFT study, the mortality in the tiotropium group was significantly reduced at 4 years (14.4% vs 16.3%; HR 0.87; 95% CI 0.76 to 0.99), although mortality at 4 years plus 30 days did not reach statistical significance (HR 0.89; 95% CI 0.79 to 1.02).8 29
Any differences in mortality should be more easily observed in patients discharged after a hospitalisation, given their worsened prognosis. As mentioned above, patients with COPD have benefited in recent years from the availability of new drugs, more powerful and effective than older respiratory drugs. Again, patients from the second cohort were more likely to receive treatment with long-acting β2 agonists and tiotropium, while the percentage of patients treated with inhaled corticoids was similar.
Some advantages and limitations of our study deserve discussion. Advantages include being conducted in the same hospital and by the same researchers, and the fact that clinically and demographically the two cohorts are homogeneous and comparable without matching by design. As mentioned above, study design is observational, by comparing two prospective cohorts. Comparisons of historical cohorts like ours are frequently used in other medical disciplines, but to date they have been scarcely used in respiratory research.30–32 The intrinsic strengths and limitations of this specific study design are discussed elsewhere, but we believe it is a major strength of our study that, even without any artificial matching by design, the baseline characteristics of our two cohorts obtained 7 years apart are absolutely comparable (virtually identical) at discharge from hospital. At any rate, all results are adjusted at the individual level in the reported multivariate analyses. With current knowledge, it might be considered unethical to randomise patients to no treatment, either respiratory or non-respiratory, and by using recently discharged instead of stable COPD as in published clinical trials, the efficacy of these treatments appears maximised. Concerning the limitations, we should underline again that the spirometric data are not fully comparable, being obtained on the last day of admission for patients in the 1996–7 cohort and a month later for the 2003–4 cohort. This was done in the first cohort to minimise data loss during hospitalisation, and we reported no relationship between mortality and FEV1,11 so procedures were changed for the 2003–4 cohort. Additionally, later research indicated that outcomes after a COPD exacerbation take weeks to return to baseline, or often never return to previous levels, so spirometry 1 month after discharge became our only protocol change.33 Moreover, the 6-minute walking test was not conducted in the first cohort and we are unable to show changes in the BODE index. A final limitation is the low number of women in our study, related to local smoking history exposure in our source population, although the frequency of women hospitalised with COPD we obtained is similar to that found in other studies in the same geographical area.34
In summary, our study identifies a significant mortality reduction after hospital discharge in patients with COPD nowadays, due in part to a better prognosis of heart failure and cancer, but also probably related to an improvement in our understanding and treatment of the disease. Our findings, if confirmed by others, should contribute to the abandonment of the unjustified nihilism that has accompanied COPD until recent times.35
Acknowledgments
We thank Anna Puigdefabregas (Servei d'Informació i Estudis) for her assistance in searching for mortality data of some patients, and Tom Yohannan for his editorial assistance.
References
Footnotes
Linked articles 128330.
Funding This study was supported by a research grant from the Fundacio per la Recerca de Mutua de Terrassa (MI03/07).
Competing interests None.
Ethics approval This study was conducted with the approval of the University Hospital Mutua de Terrassa Research and Ethics Committee, and all subjects gave their written informed consent.
All co-authors accept responsibility for the conduct of this study and for the analysis and interpretation of the data. All co-authors helped write this manuscript and agree with the decisions made.
Provenance and peer review Not commissioned; externally peer reviewed.