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[Effectiveness of pharmaceutical care for patients with COPD: translated review of the recently published PHARMACOP trial].

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[Effectiveness of pharmaceutical care for patients with COPD: translated review of the recently published PHARMACOP trial].

J Pharm Belg. 2014 Sep;(3):4-14

Authors: Tommelein E, Mehuys E, Van Hees T, Adriaens E, Van Bortel L, Christiaens T, Van Tongelen I, Remon JP, Boussery K, Brusselle G

Abstract
BACKGROUND AND AIM: Few well-designed randomized controlled trials (RCT) regarding the impact of community pharmacist interventions on pharmacotherapeutic monitoring of patients with Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease [COPD) have been conducted. We assessed the effectiveness of a pharmaceutical care program for patients with COPD.
METHODS: The PHARMACOP-trial was a single-blind 3-month RCT, conducted in 170 community pharmacies in Belgium, enrolling patients prescribed daily COPD medication, aged > or = 50 years, and with a smoking history > or = 10 pack-years. A computer-generated randomization sequence allocated patients to intervention (n = 371), receiving protocol-defined pharmacist care, or control group (n = 363), receiving usual pharmacist care 11:1 ratio, stratified by center). Interventions, focusing on inhalation technique and adherence to maintenance therapy, were carried out at start of the trial and at one month follow-up. Primary outcomes were inhalation technique and medication adherence. Secondary outcomes were exacerbation rate, dyspnea, COPD specific and generic health status and smoking behavior.
RESULTS: From December 2010 to April 2011, 734 patients were enrolled. 42 patients (5.7%) were lost to follow-up. At the end of the trial, inhalation score (Mean estimated difference [delta], 13.5%; 95% Confidence Interval [CI], 10.8-16.1; P < .0001] and medication adherence [(delta, 8.51%; 95% CI, 4.63-12.4; P < .0001) were significantly higher in the intervention group compared to the control group. In the intervention group, a significantly lower hospitalization rate was observed (9 vs 35 hospitalizations; Rate Ratio, 0.28; 95% CI, 0.12-0.64; P = .003). No other significant between-group differences were observed.
CONCLUSION: The PHARMACOP-trial demonstrates that pragmatic pharmacist care programs improve both inhalation technique and medication adherence in patients with COPD and could reduce hospitalization rates. The protocolled intervention used in this trial was specifically designed for and evaluated in (Belgian) community pharmacies. This may facilitate future implementation in the Belgian context.

PMID: 25226757 [PubMed - in process]

Predictors of Hospital Admission Two Months after Emergency Department Evaluation of COPD Exacerbation.

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Predictors of Hospital Admission Two Months after Emergency Department Evaluation of COPD Exacerbation.

Respiration. 2014 Sep 10;

Authors: Quintana JM, Esteban C, Garcia-Gutierrez S, Aguirre U, Gonzalez N, Lafuente I, Bare M, Fernandez de Larrea N, Rivas-Ruiz F

Abstract
Background: Limited information is available regarding the factors related to short-term hospital admission following an exacerbation of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (eCOPD). Objectives: The aim of this study was to identify variables related to short-term admission in patients with an eCOPD. Methods: This was a prospective cohort study of patients with an eCOPD who attended an emergency department (ED) at 1 of 16 hospitals. Information on possible predictor variables was recorded during the ED stay, 24 h after admission to the hospital or after ED discharge home, and at hospital discharge or 1 week later if discharged home from the ED. An admission after an eCOPD within 2 months was the outcome of interest. Multivariate models were employed for patients admitted to the hospital or discharged home from the ED. Results: For patients discharged home from the ED, eCOPD-related hospital admissions in the previous year [odds ratio (OR) 1.98 and 2.33], pCO2 at ED admission (ORs 2.02 and 2.90), the number of ED visits within 1 week of the index ED visit (OR 5.14) and dyspnea level 1 week after the index ED visit (ORs 2.66 and 1.40) were predictors of short-term admission [area under the curve (AUC) 0.82]. For patients admitted to the hospital during the index ED visit, baseline FEV1% (ORs 1.32 and 1.88), eCOPD-related hospital admissions in the previous year (ORs 1.28 and 2.51), severe baseline dyspnea (OR 2.57) and dyspnea level 1 week after the index ED visit (ORs 2.15 and 1.74) were predictors of short-term readmission (AUC 0.73). Conclusions: Just a few easily recorded parameters may allow clinicians to identify patients at a higher risk of short-term readmission and establish preventive strategies. © 2014 S. Karger AG, Basel.

PMID: 25228470 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]

The effects of secondhand smoke on chronic obstructive pulmonary disease in nonsmoking Korean adults.

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The effects of secondhand smoke on chronic obstructive pulmonary disease in nonsmoking Korean adults.

Korean J Intern Med. 2014 Sep;29(5):613-9

Authors: Kim WJ, Song JS, Park DW, Kwak HJ, Moon JY, Kim SH, Sohn JW, Yoon HJ, Shin DH, Park SS, Kim TH

Abstract
BACKGROUND/AIMS: Smoking is widely acknowledged as the single most important risk factor for chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD). However, the risk of COPD in nonsmokers exposed to secondhand smoke remains controversial. In this study, we investigated the association of secondhand smoke exposure with COPD prevalence in nonsmokers who reported never smoking.
METHODS: This study was based on data obtained from the Korean National Health and Nutrition Examination Surveys (KNHANES) conducted from 2008 to 2010. Using nationwide stratified random sampling, 8,596 participants aged ≥ 40 years of age with available spirometry results were recruited. After selecting participants who never smoked, the duration of exposure to secondhand smoke was assessed based on the KNHANES questionnaire.
RESULTS: The prevalence of COPD was 6.67% in participants who never smoked. We divided the participants who had never smoked into those with or without exposure to secondhand smoke. The group exposed to secondhand smoke was younger with less history of asthma and tuberculosis, higher income, and higher educational status. Multivariate logistic regression analysis determined that secondhand smoke did not increase the prevalence of COPD.
CONCLUSIONS: There was no significant difference in the prevalence of COPD between participants who had never smoked with or without exposure to secondhand smoke in our study. Thus, secondhand smoke may not be an important risk factor for the development of COPD in patients who have never smoked.

PMID: 25228837 [PubMed - in process]

Serial Measurements of Arterial Oxygen Tension are Associated with Mortality in COPD.

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Serial Measurements of Arterial Oxygen Tension are Associated with Mortality in COPD.

COPD. 2014 Sep 17;

Authors: Aanerud M, Saure EW, Benet M, Basagana X, Bakke PS, Garcia-Aymerich J, Eagan TM, Anto JM, Hardie JA

Abstract
Abstract Background: Knowledge on factors associated with mortality can help identify patients with COPD that might benefit from close monitoring and intervention. Arterial blood gases (ABGs) are related to mortality, but both arterial tension of oxygen (PaO2) and arterial tension of carbon dioxide (PaCO2) vary over time. The aim of our study was to investigate the association between repeatedly measured ABGs and mortality in men and women with COPD. Methods: A cohort of 419 Norwegian subjects with COPD, GOLD stage II-IV, aged 40-75, was followed up with up to seven ABGs, measured during stable phase for three years. Cox proportional hazard models were used to quantify the relationship between both single and repeatedly measured ABGs and all-cause mortality after five years, adjusting for age, sex, and the updated BODE index. Results: A total of 64 subjects died during follow-up. Mean initial arterial oxygen tension (standard deviation) was significantly higher in survivors compared to deceased, with PaO2 (in kPa) 9.4 (1.1) versus 8.8 (1.2), p<0.001. Corresponding numbers for PaCO2 were 5.3 (0.5) and 5.5 (0.7), p < 0.001. In analyses adjusting for age, sex, and the updated BODE index hazard ratios -HR(95% confidence intervals) - for all-cause mortality were 0.73 (0.55, 0.97) and 1.58 (0.90, 2.76) for repeated measures of PaO2 and PaCO2, respectively. Conclusion: Both arterial oxygen and carbon dioxide tension were related to mortality in this study, and arterial oxygen tension added prognostic information to the updated BODE index in COPD.

PMID: 25230156 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]

Ventilation Distribution Heterogeneity at Rest as a Marker of Exercise Impairment in Mild-to-Advanced COPD.

The difference between total lung capacity (TLC) by body plethysmography and alveolar volume (VA) from the single-breath lung diffusing capacity measurement provides an index of ventilation distribution inequalities in COPD. The relevance of these abnormalities to dyspnea and exercise intolerance across the continuum of disease severity remains unknown.

Two-hundred and seventy-six COPD patients distributed across GOLD grades 1 to 4 and 67 healthy controls were evaluated. The "poorly communicating fraction" (PCF) of the TLC was estimated as the ratio (%) of TLC to VA. Healthy subjects showed significantly lower PCF values compared to GOLD grades 1 to 4 (10 ± 3% vs. 17 ± 8% vs. 27 ± 10% vs. 37 ± 10% vs. 56 ± 11%, respectively; p < 0.05).

Pulmonary gas exchange impairment, mechanical ventilatory constraints and ventilation-corrected dyspnea scores worsened across PCF tertiles (p < 0.05). Of note, GOLD grades 1 and 2 patients with the highest PCF values had pronounced exercise ventilatory inefficiency and dyspnea as a limiting symptom. In fact, dyspnea was a significant contributor to exercise limitation only in those with "moderate" or "extensive" PCF (p < 0.05). A receiver operating characteristics curve analysis revealed that PCF was a better predictor of severely reduced maximal exercise capacity than traditional pulmonary function indexes including FEV1 (area under the curve (95% confidence interval) = 0.85 (0.81-0.89), best cutoff = 33.4%; p < 0.01).

In conclusion, PCF is a readily available functional marker of gas exchange and mechanical abnormalities relevant to dyspnea and exercise intolerance across the COPD grades.

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