| Literature DB >> 18488427 |
Attiya Siddiqi1, Sanjay Sethi.
Abstract
Our understanding of the etiology, pathogenesis and consequences of acute exacerbations of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) has increased substantially in the last decade. Several new lines of evidence demonstrate that bacterial isolation from sputum during acute exacerbation in many instances reflects a cause-effect relationship. Placebo-controlled antibiotic trials in exacerbations of COPD demonstrate significant clinical benefits of antibiotic treatment in moderate and severe episodes. However, in the multitude of antibiotic comparison trials, the choice of antibiotics does not appear to affect the clinical outcome, which can be explained by several methodological limitations of these trials. Recently, comparison trials with nontraditional end-points have shown differences among antibiotics in the treatment of exacerbations of COPD. Observational studies that have examined clinical outcome of exacerbations have repeatedly demonstrated certain clinical characteristics to be associated with treatment failure or early relapse. Optimal antibiotic selection for exacerbations has therefore incorporated quantifying the risk for a poor outcome of the exacerbation and choosing antibiotics differently for low risk and high risk patients, reserving the broader spectrum drugs for the high risk patients. Though improved outcomes in exacerbations with antibiotic choice based on such risk stratification has not yet been demonstrated in prospective controlled trials, this approach takes into account concerns of disease heterogeneity, antibiotic resistance and judicious antibiotic use in exacerbations.Entities:
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Year: 2008 PMID: 18488427 PMCID: PMC2528209 DOI: 10.2147/copd.s1089
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Chron Obstruct Pulmon Dis ISSN: 1176-9106
Anthonisen classification of COPD exacerbations based on cardinal symptoms. Based on data from Anthonisen and colleagues (1987)
| Severity of exacerbation | Type of exacerbation | Characteristics |
|---|---|---|
| Severe | Type 1 | Increased dyspnea, sputum volume and sputum purulence |
| Moderate | Type 2 | Any 2 of the above 3 cardinal symptoms |
| Mild | Type 3 | Any 1 of the above 3 cardinal symptoms and 1 or more of the following minor symptoms or signs |
- Cough - Wheezing - Fever without an obvious source - Upper respiratory tract infection in the past 5 days - Respiratory rate increase >20% over baseline - Heart rate increase >20% over baseline |
Microbial pathogens in exacerbations of COPD
| Pathogen class | Proportion of exacerbations | Specific species | Proportion of class of pathogens |
|---|---|---|---|
| Bacteria | 40%–50% | Nontypeable | 30%–50% |
| 15%–20% | |||
| 15%–20% | |||
| Isolated in very severe COPD, concomitant bronchiectasis, recurrent exacerbations | |||
| Isolated frequently, pathogenic significance undefined | |||
| Isolated frequently, pathogenic significance undefined | |||
| Isolated infrequently, pathogenic significance undefined | |||
| Viruses | 30%–40% | 40%–50% | |
| 10%–20% | |||
| 10%–20% | |||
| 10%–20% | |||
| 10%–20% | |||
| 5%–10% | |||
| Atypical bacteria | 5%–10% | 90%–95% | |
| 5%–10% |
Figure 1Proposed model of bacterial exacerbation pathogenesis in COPD. Copyright © 2006. Reproduced with permission from Veeramachaneni SB, Sethi S. 2006. Pathogenesis of bacterial exacerbations of COPD. J Chronic Obstructive Pul Dis, 3:109–15.
Proposed goals of treatment of COPD exacerbation
| Goals | Comments |
|---|---|
| Clinical resolution to baseline | Needs baseline assessment prior to exacerbation onset for comparison |
| Prevention of relapse | Relapse within 30 days is quite frequent |
| Increasing exacerbation-free interval | Needs long term follow up after treatment |
| Faster resolution of symptoms | Needs validated symptom assessment tools |
| Preservation of health-related quality of life | Sustained decrements seen after exacerbations |
| Bacterial eradication | Often presumed in usual antibiotic comparison studies |
| Resolution of airway inflammation | Shown to be incomplete if bacteria persist |
| Resolution of systemic inflammation | Persistence of systemic inflammation predicts early relapse |
| Restoration of lung function to baseline | Incomplete recovery is seen in significant proportion |
| Preservation of lung function | Needs long term studies |
Results of a recent placebo controlled trial in exacerbations of COPD requiring intensive care unit admission. Based on data from Nouira and colleagues (2001)
| Outcome | Ofloxacin | Placebo | Risk reduction | p value |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2 (4%) | 10 (22%) | 17.5 (4.3 to 30.7) | 0.01 | |
| 3 (6%) | 16 (35%) | 28.4 (12.9 to 43.9) | 0.0006 | |
| 5 (11%) | 26 (57%) | 45.9 (29.1 to 62.7) | <0.0001 |
Limitations of published placebo-controlled antibiotic trials in acute exacerbations of COPD. Copyright © 2004. Reproduced with permission from Sethi S. 2004a. Bacteria in exacerbations of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease. Phenomenon or epiphenomenon? Proc Am Thorac Soc, 1:109–14
| Limitation of study design | Potential consequences |
|---|---|
| Small number of subjects | Type 2 error |
| Subjects with mild or no underlying COPD included | Diminished overall perceived efficacy of antibiotics |
| Nonbacterial exacerbations included | Type 2 error |
| End-points compared at 3 weeks after onset | - Spontaneous resolution mitigates differences between arms - Clinically irrelevant as most decisions about antibiotic efficacy are made earlier |
| Speed of resolution not measured | Clinically relevant end-point not assessed |
| Lack of long-term follow up | Time to next exacerbation not assessed |
| Antibiotic resistance to agents with limited in vitro antimicrobial efficacy | Diminished overall perceived efficacy of antibiotics |
| Poor penetration of antibiotics used in to respiratory tissues | Diminished overall perceived efficacy of antibiotics |
| Concurrent therapy not controlled | Undetected bias in use of concurrent therapy |
Figure 2Life-table analysis of time to the first composite event (treatment failure, and/or new exacerbation and/or any further antibiotic treatment) stratified according to the time of the last exacerbation prior to randomization. Copyright © 2004. Reprinted with permission from Wilson R, Allegra L, et al 2004. Short-term and long-term outcomes of moxifloxacin compared to standard antibiotic treatment in acute exacerbations of chronic bronchitis. Chest, 125:953–64.
Figure 3Algorithm for antibiotic treatment of acute exacerbations of COPD.