Patients with Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease and Evidence of Eosinophilic Inflammation Experience Exacerbations Despite Receiving Maximal Inhaled Maintenance Therapy
Author
Date
2022-09-09Permanent link
https://hdl.handle.net/11351/8462DOI
10.2147/COPD.S378649
ISSN
1178-2005
WOS
000854022200001
PMID
36110306
Abstract
Background: Some patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) experience frequent exacerbations despite maximal inhaled therapy (“triple therapy”), possibly leading to high health care resource utilization (HCRU).
Aim: Describe characteristics, future HCRU, and mortality of patients with COPD who experience frequent exacerbations despite triple therapy; characterize individuals who may be candidates for biologic therapies.
Methods: This descriptive observational study used primary care data of patients aged ≥ 40 years in the United Kingdom receiving maintenance therapy for COPD who had ≥ 1 year of data prior to index date and ≥ 1 year of follow-up data. We described these patients’ clinical and demographic characteristics, including blood eosinophil counts (BEC), pattern of exacerbations, hospitalizations, and corticosteroid exposure, as well as future exacerbations, hospitalizations, and death.
Results: Of 43,753 patients with maintenance-treated COPD, 6480 experienced exacerbations despite ≥ 3 months of triple therapy. Of these, 5669 had available BEC: 1287 (22.7%) had BEC ≥ 250 cells/μL and ≥ 3 exacerbations in the year prior to the index date; 471 (36.6%) received ≥ 4 acute courses of oral corticosteroids. Patients with a pattern of high disease burden continued to have high disease burden: 51.1% experienced ≥ 3 exacerbations and 2.6% experienced ≥ 3 hospitalizations. Patients who experienced exacerbations despite triple therapy had a significantly higher risk of COPD-related death than other maintenance-treated patients (5.8% vs 2.1%).
Conclusion: Nearly one-quarter of patients receiving triple therapy for COPD who experienced frequent exacerbations had elevated BEC and ≥ 3 exacerbations, suggesting a potential mechanism of persistent eosinophilic inflammation that could be a target for eosinophil-depleting biologic therapy.
Keywords
Disease burden; Eosinophils; ExacerbationsBibliographic citation
Chen S, Miravitlles M, Rhee CK, Pavord ID, Jones R, Carter V, et al. Patients with Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease and Evidence of Eosinophilic Inflammation Experience Exacerbations Despite Receiving Maximal Inhaled Maintenance Therapy. Int J Chron Obstruct Pulmon Dis. 2022 Sep 9;17:2187–200.
Audience
Professionals
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- HVH - Articles científics [4476]
- VHIR - Articles científics [1751]
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