Exacerbations in COPD: One thing leads to
another
Newswise — New research shows that
individual exacerbations in chronic
obstructive lung disease (COPD) themselves
increase the likelihood of repeat
exacerbations, even after five days of full,
asymptomatic recovery—bad news for patients
with COPD, where each exacerbation can drive
the progression of the disease.
“This concept that exacerbations are not
random has important implication for the
analysis of clinical trial data and
identifies a specific high-risk period for
recurrent exacerbation during which
preventative interventions might be
targeted,” wrote lead author, John Hurst,
M.D., of the Royal Free and University
College Medical School, in London.
The results appeared in the first issue for
March of the American Journal of Respiratory
and Critical Care Medicine, a publication of
the American Thoracic Society.
In patients with COPD, exacerbations are
generally defined as an acute worsening of
symptoms.
Exacerbations in and of themselves are
inherently dangerous and can lead to
hospitalization and serious complications.
But beyond their acute dangers,
exacerbations drive lung function decline,
and many patients never recover their
baseline level of lung function after
exacerbations.
Prior to this research, however,
exacerbations were assumed to be isolated
events unrelated to one another despite
observational data that suggested a
dependency.
To test the validity of this assumption,
which not only informs treatment plans for
patients with COPD, but also forms the basis
of research design and analysis, Dr. Hurst
and colleagues analyzed daily symptom
diaries that were kept for at least one year
by 297 COPD patients, describing nearly
2,000 distinct exacerbation events.
Two or more new or worsening symptoms, one
of which must be “major” (e.g., dyspnea,
more sputum, or a change in color of sputum)
constituted an exacerbation, and after five
days of symptoms reverting to baseline
severity, the exacerbation was considered to
be over.
A second exacerbation occurring within an
eight-week period was considered to be a
recurrent exacerbation.
The researchers further analyzed seasonality
of exacerbations, comparing their winter
(November to January) frequency with their
summer (June-August) frequency.
In addition to the finding that
exacerbations were clustered in time within
individuals, the researchers found that they
were significantly more common in the winter
than the summer.
They also noted that “isolated”
exacerbations tended on average to be about
25 percent more severe than the first of
serial exacerbations.
But most importantly, the researchers
identified an eight-week period of time
during which monitoring and follow-up is
crucial to prevent or minimize further
exacerbations in the COPD patient.
“Our finding of a high-risk period for
recurrent exacerbation may be important in
guiding patient follow-up,” wrote Dr. Hurst.
“The mechanisms of exacerbation recurrence
remain unexplored, and it is unknown whether
recurrence is due to persistence of an
existing organism or to acquisition of a new
one,” noted Dr. Hurst. However, there are
some clues that may guide future research.
“The failure to eradicate bacteria with
exacerbation therapy has been associated
with an incomplete recovery in inflammatory
markers and we have recently reported a
relationship between elevated C-reactive
protein during the recovery period of an
initial exacerbation and shorter time to the
next.”
Furthermore, the paper noted that “symptoms
more typical of viral infection are
significantly more common during isolated
events.”
“This knowledge is very important for
physicians,” wrote Shawn D. Aaron, M.D., of
the Ottawa Health Research Institute, in
Canada, in an editorial in the same issue of
the journal.
“Clinicians should now be aware that their
patients with COPD who experience an
exacerbation may be particularly ‘brittle’
during a subsequent eight-week period.
"Close
monitoring and follow-up during this time
would hopefully lead to earlier therapy for
recurrent exacerbations that may improve
clinical outcomes.”