| Literature DB >> 21941649 |
Stamatis Katsenos1, Stavros H Constantopoulos.
Abstract
Long-term oxygen therapy (LTOT) is the cornerstone mode of treatment in patients with severe chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) associated with resting hypoxaemia. When appropriately prescribed and correctly used, LTOT has clearly been shown to improve survival in hypoxemic COPD patients. Adherence to LTOT ranges from 45% to 70% and utilization for more than 15 hours per day is widely accepted as efficacious. Although several studies have addressed the level of patients' adherence to LTOT, few have suggested or evaluated interventions that conduce to compliance enhancement. The lack of sufficient data regarding COPD patients following oxygen prescription is an enormous void that must be duly confronted to augment clinical effectiveness and cost containment for the long term use. The present review article highlights factors influencing the compliance of patients using LTOT and emphasizes novel strategies and interventions that may prove to be of significant benefit given the remarkably little current research appraising this issue. Therefore, additional research should be promptly performed to verify the efficacy of newly designed approaches in improving the outcomes of patients receiving LTOT.Entities:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21941649 PMCID: PMC3175397 DOI: 10.1155/2011/325362
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pulm Med ISSN: 2090-1844
Overview of adherence evaluation for LTOT.
| Source | Subjects/methods | Adherence outcome percent or | Comments |
|---|---|---|---|
| Evans et al. [ | 14 Concentrator patients Evaluated usage in comparison to prescribed 15 hours/day |
| Patient home respiratory support needed |
| Vergeret et al. [ | 159 Hypoxic COPD patients | Fixed: | Oxygen use and quality of life increased with portable use. Equipment aesthetics and supervision during the first three months needed |
| Walshaw et al. [ | 61 patients reassessed for use and prescription appropriateness | 45.9% inadequate prescription 29.5% compliance with correct prescription | Clinician and patient education should be enhanced |
| Howard et al. [ | 531 concentrators after use Compared prescription and concentrator clocks | Prescription <15 h/d then | LTOT is complex and education for rationale disease management needed. Regular home care is necessary |
| Restrick et al. [ | 176 patients interviewed and followed up | 74% used 12 + h/d | Reassessment necessary. Greater communication among providers |
| Morrison and Stovall [ | 630 LTOT patients 79% were COPD |
| Instruction needed at time of prescription but also followup later when clinically stable |
| Pépin et al. [ | 930 COPD patients | 45% achieved 15 + h/d | Education at prescription needed and more prospective educational intervention studies necessary |
| Granados et al. [ | 62 LTOT patients participated 70% were COPD | 31% met all criteria for adherence to adequate prescription | Therapeutic process is noted as prescription, oxygen device, and compliance. Chronic care requires reassessment |
| Ringbæk et al. [ | 125 of 182 LTOT patients surveyed and evaluated as to activities and portable oxygen use | 65% acceptable compliance | Need to discuss how and when LTOT is used and portable oxygen options needed |
| Atiş et al. [ | 379 of 1100 patients responded to questionnaire | 28.2% self-reported use was 15 + h/d | Physician instruction and followup produced greater use by patients |
| Katsenos et al. [ | 249 LTOT patients | 26.9% complied. | A well-organized home care program may check LTOT utility and enhance its efficacy in COPD patients |
| Lacasse et al. [ | 24 hypoxic COPD patients were allocated to three interventions: oxygen concentrator only, concentrator plus as-needed ambulatory oxygen and concentrator plus ambulatory compressed air. | Concentrator use: 18 h/day | The widespread provision of portable oxygen-dependent COPD patients is not justified. The efficient use of ambulatory oxygen in a successful course of respiratory rehabilitation remains to be determined |
| Nasiłowski et al. [ | 30 patients under LTOT (77% COPD patients) were followed up for14 consecutive months | 37% compliance. | An alternative oxygen source, which would not generate any noise or electricity consumption may positively affect the compliance |
Factors influential to patient adherence.
| Illness factors | Personal/family factors |
|---|---|
| Illness characteristics | Demographic factors |
| Treatment complexity | Patient/Family functioning |
| Attitudes toward LTOT | Cognitive factors (e.g., health literacy) |
Figure 1Long-term oxygen therapy: a research agenda for compliance.