| Literature DB >> 26392769 |
Annemarie L Lee1, Roger S Goldstein2.
Abstract
COPD is a long-term condition associated with considerable disability with a clinical course characterized by episodes of worsening respiratory signs and symptoms associated with exacerbations. Gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD) is one of the most common gastrointestinal conditions in the general population and has emerged as a comorbidity of COPD. GERD may be diagnosed by both symptomatic approaches (including both typical and atypical symptoms) and objective measurements. Based on a mix of diagnostic approaches, the prevalence of GERD in COPD ranges from 17% to 78%. Although GERD is usually confined to the lower esophagus in some individuals, it may be associated with pulmonary microaspiration of gastric contents. Possible mechanisms that may contribute to GERD in COPD originate from gastroesophageal dysfunction, including altered pressure in the lower esophageal sphincter (which normally protect against GERD) and changes in esophageal motility. Proposed respiratory contributions to the development of GERD include respiratory medications that may alter esophageal sphincter tone and changes in respiratory mechanics, with increased lung hyperinflation compromising the antireflux barrier. Although the specific cause and effect relationship between GERD and COPD has not been fully elucidated, GERD may influence lung disease severity and has been identified as a significant predictor of acute exacerbations of COPD. Further clinical effects could include a poorer health-related quality of life and an increased cost in health care, although these factors require further clarification. There are both medical and surgical options available for the treatment of GERD in COPD and while extensive studies in this population have not been undertaken, this comorbidity may be amenable to treatment.Entities:
Keywords: COPD; GERD; pulmonary aspiration; treatment
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26392769 PMCID: PMC4574848 DOI: 10.2147/COPD.S77562
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Chron Obstruct Pulmon Dis ISSN: 1176-9106
Figure 1Typical and atypical clinical presentations of GERD.
Abbreviations: GERD, gastroesophageal reflux disease; ENT, ears-nose-throat.
Diagnostic approaches and prevalence of GERD in COPD
| Study | N, sex, age mean (SD) | Disease severity (FEV1% pd) | Questionnaire/objective measure | Prevalence of GERD and symptom descriptions |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mokhlesi et al | COPD: n= 100, Sex: NR | NR | Modified Mayo Clinic GER questionnaire: common symptoms (frequency and severity), effect on respiratory symptoms, and medications. | Prevalence in COPD: 26%. Prevalence in controls: 25%. Increase in respiratory symptoms (cough, SOB, wheezing associated with heartburn in 26% of those with GERD). |
| Phulpoto et al | COPD: n= 100, Sex: NR | NR | Modified Mayo clinic questionnaire: frequency and characterization of reflux or heartburn symptoms over past year. | Prevalence in COPD: 25%. Prevalence in controls: 9%. Heartburn, acid regurgitation more frequent in COPD to controls. More frequent symptoms in those with COPD with FEV1 <50% pd compared to those with FEV1 >50% pd. |
| Rascon-Aguilar et al | COPD: n=91, Sex: 55% male | NR | Mayo clinic GER questionnaire: frequency and characterization of reflux or heartburn symptoms over past year. Weekly symptoms classed as positive GERD. | Prevalence in COPD: 32%. |
| Terada et al | COPD: n=82, Sex: 94% male | COPD: 57 (20)% pd | Self-reported FSSG: typical and dysmotility symptoms. | FSSG: Prevalence in COPD: 27%, Prevalence in control: 13%. |
| Control: n=40, Sex: 48% male | Control: 101 (16)% pd | QUEST | QUEST: Prevalence in COPD: 24%, Prevalence in control: 10%. | |
| Rogha et al | COPD: n= 110 | NR | Mayo clinic questionnaire: frequency and characterization of reflux or heartburn symptoms over past year. Weekly symptoms classed as positive GERD. | Prevalence in COPD: 54%. 66% with weekly and 34% with daily symptoms. |
| Bor et al | COPD: n= 133 | NR | Reflux questionnaire: effect of GERD symptoms on respiratory disease; medications, typical reflux symptoms. | Prevalence in COPD: 16.5%. Prevalence in controls: 19.4%. In COPD: occasional (symptoms less than once weekly in last year) heartburn in 11%, occasional regurgitation in 1 1.3%. |
| Takada et al | COPD: n=221 | NR | FSSG: typical and dysmotility symptoms. | Prevalence in COPD: 27%. |
| Shimizu et al | COPD: n=40 | COPD: 1.4 (0.9) L | FSSG: typical and dysmotility symptoms. | Prevalence in COPD: 33%. |
| Casanova et al | COPD: n=42 Sex: 100% male | COPD: 35 (20–49) | Single-channel (distal), 24-hour pH monitoring. Antireflux medication ceased 7 days prior to study. | Prevalence in COPD: 62%. Prevalence in controls: 19%. Combined reflux pattern (supine and upright) in 73% of those with COPD. Symptomatic (heartburn and acid regurgitation) GERD in 23% of those with COPD. |
| Andersen and Jensen | COPD: n=264 Sex: NR Age: 58 (45) | COPD: NR | 12-hour esophageal pH monitoring. | Prevalence in COPD: 8%. |
| D’Ovidio et al | COPD: n=21 | 20 (23)% pd | Dual-channel, 24-hour pH monitoring. | Prevalence in COPD: 19%, with asymptomatic GERD in 52%. Proximal reflux present in 29%. |
| Sweet et al | COPD: n=21 | NR | Dual-channel, 24-hour pH monitoring. | Prevalence in COPD: 43%. |
| Kempainen et al | COPD: n=42 | 24 (9)% pd | Dual-channel, 24-hour pH monitoring. | Prevalence in COPD: 52%. |
| Gadel et al | COPD: n=40 Sex: 100% male | NR | Single-channel, 24-hour pH monitoring. | Prevalence in COPD: 35%. |
| Kamble et al | COPD: n=50 | 59 (5)% pd | Dual-channel, 24-hour pH monitoring. | Prevalence in COPD: 78% based on pH monitoring, with asymptomatic GERD in 21%. |
| Lee et al | COPD: n=27 Sex: 78% male | COPD: 47 (17)% pd | Dual-channel, 24-hour pH monitoring. Structured symptom questionnaire. | Prevalence in COPD: 37%, with asymptomatic reflux in 20%. In COPD, distal reflux only in 80%, proximal and distal reflux in 20%. |
Note:
Median (interquartile range).
Abbreviations: GERD, gastroesophageal reflux disease; SD, standard deviation; FEV1 pd, predicted; forced expiratory volume in 1 second; NR, not reported; GER, gastroesophageal reflux; SOB, shortness of breath; FSSG, frequency scale for the symptoms of GERD; QUEST, Questionnaire for the Diagnosis of Reflux Disease.
Studies exploring the effect of GERD on AECOPD
| Study | N, age | Disease severity (FEV1% pd) | Definition of GERD | Definition of AECOPD | Key findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Rascon-Aguilar et al | COPD: n=91 | NR | Mayo Clinic GERD | Worsening dyspnea, increasing sputum volume or purulent sputum in conjunction with corticosteroids or antibiotics, hospitalization or emergency department visits in previous 12 months. | Greater number of AECOPD in those with GERD symptoms (3.2 vs 1.6, |
| Terada et al | COPD: n=82 | COPD: 60% pd | Self-reported FSSG questionnaire | Modified Anthonisen’s criteria (two or more of three major symptoms (increase in dyspnea, sputum purulence, or quantity) or any major symptoms with one minor symptom (wheeze, sore throat, cough, fever, and nasal discharge) for at least 2 consecutive days. | Higher incidence of exacerbations in those with GERD symptoms (RR 1.93 [95% CI 1.32–2.84]). FSSG score correlated with number of exacerbations ( |
| Eryuksel et al | COPD: n=29 | NR | Laryngeal reflux: LPR criteria (reflux symptoms index, reflux finding score and laryngoscope) | Worsening of dyspnea, sputum volume, or color change in last year. | Increased risk of AECOPD in those with LPR (3.67 [95% CI 0.17–79.61]). No difference in number of AECOPD. |
| Hurst et al | n=2, 138 | NR | Self-reported symptoms and history of heartburn | Physician prescription of systemic corticosteroids or antibiotics, alone or in combination. | Risk of AECOPD in those with GERD (OR 1.69 [95% CI 1.38–2.06]). |
| Rogha et al | COPD: n=110 | NR | Mayo GERQ | Increase in cough frequency, severity, increase in dyspnea or change in volume, and/or sputum purulence. | Increased number of exacerbations in those with GERD (2.1 vs 1.4, |
| Terada et al | COPD: n=67 | COPD: 56 (52–61) | FSSG questionnaire | Modified Anthonisen’s criteria. | Increased risk of AECOPD in those with GERD (RR 6.24 [95% CI 0.90–3.34]). Abnormal swallowing reflex associated with >3 AECOPD/year. |
| Takada et al | COPD: n=221 | 68 (27)% pd | FSSG questionnaire | Modified Anthonisen’s criteria and prescription of additional systemic corticosteroids or antibiotics. | GERD increased frequency of AECOPD (RR 3.42 [95% CI 2.06–5.69]). GERD increased frequency of hospitalization due to AECOPD with RR 3.66 (95% 1.62–8.24). Significant correlation between FSSG acid reflux score and number of AECOPD ( |
| Liang and Feng | COPD: n=428 | 47–71 | RDQ | CAT score: increase in 5 points considered to have an exacerbation. | Those with exacerbations had higher RDG scores (high risk with score > 12). High GERD risk increased risk of AECOPD (OR 3.02 [95% CI 1.76–4.31]). |
| Ozyilmaz et al | COPD: n=107 | 51 (18)% pd | Modified simple questionnaire of symptoms (heartburn, regurgitation, dyspepsia, dysphagia, nausea, vomiting, abdominal pain, dry cough, chest pain). Those with at least two symptoms weekly with antireflux therapy classed as GERD | AECOPD requiring oral steroids and/or antibiotics resulting in emergency room admission or hospitalization defined as severe. | Higher prevalence of GERD symptoms in frequent exacerbators (58% vs 22%, |
| Ingebrigtsen et al | COPD: n=1,259 | NR | Question relating to the experience of heartburn (daytime or nocturnal) | Prescription of oral corticosteroids with/without antibiotics dispensed <4 weeks apart. | Coexisting nocturnal and daytime GERD increased risk of AECOPD in those not using acid inhibitory treatment (HR 2.1 [95% CI 1.1–4.1]). Attributable risk of AECOPD was 31% in those with daytime and nocturnal GERD due to lack of regular acid inhibitory treatment. |
Notes:
Mean (range).
Range.
Abbreviations: GERD, gastroesophageal reflux disease; AECOPD, acute exacerbation of COPD; FEV1, forced expiratory volume in 1 second; NR, not reported; CI, confidence interval; FSSG, frequency scale for the symptoms of GERD; RR, risk ratio; LPR, laryngopharyngeal reflux; OR, odds ratio; GERQ, gastroesophageal reflux questionnaire; RDQ, reflux diagnostic questionnaire; CAT, COPD Assessment Test; RDG, Reflux Disease Questionnaire; HR, hazard ratio.
Effects of medical and surgical treatment on GERD in COPD
| Study | N | Treatment approach | Effects of treatment |
|---|---|---|---|
| Mokhlesi et al | 100 | Antireflux therapy (duration not specified) | Significant respiratory and GER symptoms in 9% of patients, despite H2-RA and PPI therapy. |
| Kempainen et al | 42 | Antireflux therapy (duration not specified) | NR. |
| Rascon-Aguilar | 91 | Antireflux therapy (duration not specified) | NR. |
| Sasaki et al | 100 | Antireflux therapy (12 months), Comparison of treatment (PPI therapy) vs usual care (bronchodilator therapy, smoking cessation) PPI therapy | Fewer exacerbations with PPI over 12 months compared to control (0.34 vs 1.18, |
| Eryuksel et al | 30 | Antireflux therapy (2 months) | Reduced COPD symptoms ( |
| Ingebrigtsen et al | 1,259 | Regular use of acid inhibitory therapy (59%) in those with nighttime and/or daytime GERD | NR. |
| Hartwig et al | 20 | Following bilateral lung transplantation, Nissen fundoplication (<365 days post-transplant) undertaken in selected patients | FEV1 greater at 1-year with fundoplication compared to no fundoplication (8.8% difference). |
| Hoppo et al | 11 | Pretransplant Nissen fundoplication | Improved FEV1 and FVC% predicted in overall group (separate outcomes for COPD not reported). |
Abbreviations: GER, gastroesophageal reflux; H2-RA, H2 receptor antagonist; PPI, proton pump inhibitor; PFTs, pulmonary function tests; NR, not reported; OR, odds ratio; CI, confidence interval; GERD, gastroesophageal reflux disease; FEV1, forced expiratory volume in 1 second; FVC, forced vital capacity.