| Literature DB >> 30055608 |
Nicholas P Williams1,2, Kristoffer Ostridge3,4, Jeanne-Marie Devaster5, Viktoriya Kim3,4, Ngaire A Coombs6, Simon Bourne3,7, Stuart C Clarke3,8, Stephen Harden9, Ausami Abbas9, Emmanuel Aris5, Christophe Lambert5, Andrew Tuck10, Anthony Williams8, Stephen Wootton11, Karl J Staples3,8, Tom M A Wilkinson3,4,8.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: COPD patients have increased risk of developing pneumonia, which is associated with poor outcomes. It can be symptomatically indistinguishable from exacerbations, making diagnosis challenging. Studies of pneumonia in COPD have focused on hospitalised patients and are not representative of the ambulant COPD population. Therefore, we sought to determine the incidence and aetiology of acute exacerbation events with evidence of pneumonic radiographic infiltrates in an outpatient COPD cohort.Entities:
Keywords: COPD; Exacerbations; Infiltrates; Pneumonia
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30055608 PMCID: PMC6064093 DOI: 10.1186/s12931-018-0842-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Respir Res ISSN: 1465-9921
Fig. 1Flow chart of subject enrolment and sub-groupings in the study
Baseline characteristics of the study cohort at the time of recruitment
| Characteristic | |
|---|---|
| Age (years) | 66.8 ± 8.6 |
| Male sex, n (%) | 68 (53.5) |
| Body mass index (kg/m2) | 27.7 (5.5) |
| Smoking status (n, %) | |
| Current smoker | 54 (43.0) |
| Ex-smoker | 73 (57.0) |
| Smoking history pack-yearsa | 47.0 (26.3) |
| Post-bronchodilator FEV1 (% predicted) | 46.4 ± 15.2 |
| FEV1 (Litres) | 1.20 ± 0.47 |
| FVC (Litres) | 2.82 ± 0.82 |
| GOLD Stage, n (%) | |
| II (moderate) | 57 (44.9) |
| III (severe) | 51 (40.2) |
| IV (very severe) | 19 (15.0) |
| Bronchiectasis evident on enrolment HRCT, n (%) | 10 (7.9) |
| Frequency of exacerbation reporting in the preceding 12 months, n (%) | |
| 1 exacerbation | 28 (22.0) |
| 2 exacerbations | 37 (29.1) |
| 3 or more exacerbations | 62 (48.8) |
| Number of exacerbations in the preceding 12 months | 3.1 ± 2.3 |
| ICS use, n (%) | 113 (89.0) |
| LABA use, n (%) | 104 (81.9) |
| LAMA use, n (%) | 93 (73.2) |
| Influenza vaccination in the preceding 12 months, n (%) | 114 (89.8) |
| Pneumococcal vaccination in the preceding 12 months, n (%) | 12 (9.4) |
Data presented as mean ± standard deviation or n (%) unless otherwise stated
apresented as median (IQR)
FEV1 forced expiratory volume in 1 s, FVC forced vital capacity, GOLD Global Initiative for Chronic Obstructive Lung Disease, HRCT high resolution CT, ICS inhaled corticosteroid, LABA long acting beta agonist, LAMA long acting muscarinic antagonist
Clinical characteristics of all exacerbations, stratified by the presence or absence of pneumonic infiltrate
| All exacerbations ( | Exacerbations without infiltrate ( | Exacerbations with infiltrate( | ||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| na | na | na | ||||||||
| FEV1 (Litres) | 311 | 0.96 | (0.62) | 255 | 1.0 | (0.62) | 56 | 0.85 | (0.68) | 0.042 |
| FEV1 (% predicted) | 311 | 40.2 | (18.7) | 255 | 41.0 | (19.1) | 56 | 37.1 | (19.4) | 0.038 |
| FEV1/FVC ratio | 311 | 0.39 | (0.17) | 255 | 0.39 | (0.18) | 56 | 0.35 | (0.15) | 0.075 |
| CAT score | 334 | 22 | (10) | 265 | 22 | (10) | 69 | 21 | (10) | 0.568 |
| EXACT score | 318 | 41 | (10) | 251 | 42 | (9) | 67 | 40 | (11) | 0.791 |
| Blood WCC (cellsx109L) | 328 | 8.65 | (3.98) | 261 | 8.30 | (3.60) | 67 | 9.70 | (4.90) | < 0.001 |
| Blood neutrophils (cellsx109L) | 328 | 5.75 | (3.50) | 261 | 5.50 | (3.10) | 67 | 7.30 | (4.50) | < 0.001 |
| Blood eosinophils (cellsx109L) | 328 | 0.20 | (0.20) | 261 | 0.20 | (0.20) | 67 | 0.20 | (0.20) | 0.715 |
| % blood eosinophils | 328 | 1.98 | (2.43) | 261 | 2.04 | (2.43) | 67 | 1.69 | (2.28) | 0.155 |
| CRP (mg/L) | 335 | 10.0 | (23.0) | 268 | 8.0 | (16.8) | 67 | 25.0 | (61.0) | < 0.001 |
| Fibrinogen (g/L) | 314 | 5.3 | (1.8) | 250 | 5.2 | (1.5) | 64 | 6.2 | (2.0) | < 0.001 |
| Procalcitonin (μg/L) | 327 | 0.0767 | (0.0400) | 260 | 0.0751 | (0.0400) | 67 | 0.0835 | (0.0400) | 0.054 |
| Sputum bacterial detection (culture) | 308 | 184 | (59.7) | 245 | 140 | (57.1) | 63 | 44 | (69,8) | 0.067 |
| Sputum bacterial detection (PCR) | 295 | 200 | (67.8) | 234 | 153 | (65.4) | 61 | 47 | (77.0) | 0.082 |
| Sputum viral detection (PCR) | 294 | 126 | (42.9) | 234 | 101 | (43.2) | 60 | 25 | (41.7) | 0.835 |
Continuous variables presented as median (IQR) and categorical variables as n, (%) unless otherwise stated
FEV1 Forced expiratory volume in 1 s, FVC Forced vital capacity, CAT COPD Assessment Test, EXACT EXAcerbations of Chronic pulmonary disease Tool, PCR Polymerase chain reaction, WCC white blood cell count, CRP C-reactive protein
aindicates the number of subjects with available data/samples
*P-values comparing exacerbations with and without infiltrate using Mann Whitney U test for continuous variables and Chi-square test for categorical variables
Baseline characteristics of subjects grouped by the presence/absence of at least one exacerbation with pneumonic infiltrate
| Characteristic | Subjects with no pneumonic infiltrate identified at any exacerbation ( | Subjects with ≥1 pneumonic infiltrate identified at exacerbation ( | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| na | na | ||||||
| Age (years) | 81 | 66.9 | (8.4) | 46 | 66.6 | (9.1) | 0.843 |
| Male sex, n (%) | 81 | 44 | (54.3) | 46 | 24 | (52.2) | 0.855 |
| Current smokers, n (%) | 81 | 34 | (42.0) | 46 | 20 | (43.5) | 0.508 |
| Body mass index (kg/m2) | 81 | 27.8 | (5.5) | 46 | 27.5 | (5.5) | 0.764 |
| FEV1 (Litres) | 80 | 1.26 | 0.47 | 46 | 1.08 | (0.99) | 0.036 |
| FEV1 (% predicted) | 80 | 49.2 | (15.7) | 46 | 41.7 | (13.0) | 0.007 |
| TLCO (mmol/kPa/min)* | 78 | 4.99 | (2.78) | 44 | 3.85 | (1.30) | 0.005 |
| 6MWD (meters) | 79 | 320.1 | (110.8) | 46 | 256.6 | (100.9) | 0.002 |
| CAT score | 80 | 16.3 | (7.8) | 46 | 17.5 | (7.3) | 0.399 |
| Prior history of pneumonia (before study enrolment) | 79 | 22 | (27.8) | 46 | 21 | (45.7) | 0.043 |
| Influenza vaccination during the year prior to enrolment | 81 | 72 | (88.9) | 46 | 42 | (91.3) | 0.786 |
| ICS use | 81 | 69 | (85.2) | 46 | 44 | (95.7) | 0.083 |
| Bacteria detected (culture) | 69 | 34 | (49.3) | 41 | 23 | (56.1) | 0.311 |
| Bacteria detected (PCR) | 62 | 35 | (56.5) | 40 | 28 | (70.0) | 0.169 |
Continuous variables presented as mean (SD) and categorical variables as n (%) unless otherwise stated. * presented as median (IQR)
FEV1 forced expiratory volume in 1 s, TLCO transfer factor for carbon monoxide, 6MWD 6 min walk distance, CAT COPD Assessment Test, ICS inhaled corticosteroid, PCR polymerase chain reaction
aindicates the number of subjects with available data/samples for each characteristic
*P-values comparing the subject groups using the independent sample t-test or Mann Whitney U test where appropriate for continuous variables and the Chi-square test for categorical variables
Fig. 2The seasonal distribution of all exacerbations and exacerbations with infiltrate. a.) Total number of exacerbations, and number of exacerbations with infiltrate by month; b.) Proportion of total exacerbations, with infiltrate by month
Fig. 3The lung microbiome of exacerbations, stratified by the presence or absence of pneumonic infiltrate. a.) The Shannon diversity index did not show any significant difference between radiological groups (p = 0.34). b.) The genus-level abundances showed no significant differences between groups (p = 0.54)
Fig. 4Blood inflammatory marker levels at exacerbations, stratified by the presence or absence of pneumonic infiltrate. Box and whisker plots showing a.) Blood C-reactive protein (CRP) levels; b.) Blood fibrinogen levels and c.) Blood neutrophil counts, in paired stable and acute exacerbation (AE) samples. White bars represent paired stable, non-infiltrate associated AE visits and grey bars represent paired stable, infiltrate-associated AE visits. Data are presented as median (interquartile range)
Risk factors associated with the odds of pneumonic infiltrate at exacerbation
| Characteristic | OR | (95% CI) | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Age (per year) | 0.996 | (0.952–1.042) | 0.869 |
| Male sex | 1.036 | (0.501–2.143) | 0.923 |
| BMI (per 1 kg/m2) | 0.995 | (0.938–1.056) | 0.938 |
| Current smoker | 1.524 | (0.700–3.319) | 0.288 |
| ICS use | 3.552 | (0.322–39.159 | 0.301 |
| Maintenance bronchodilator usea | 1.253 | (0.182–8.641) | 0.819 |
| FEV1% predicted | |||
| ≥ 50% | Reference | ||
| 30- < 50% | 1.044 | (0.496–2.198) | 0.909 |
| < 30% | 1.987 | (0.763–5.174) | 0.159 |
| Season | |||
| Spring (Mar – May) | 1.435 | (0.498–4.134) | 0.504 |
| Summer (Jun – Aug) | Reference | ||
| Autumn (Sep – Nov) | 1.198 | (0.407–3.523) | 0.743 |
| Winter (Dec – Feb) | 3.056 | (1.139–8.200) | 0.027 |
| Sputum purulence | 1.112 | (0.572–2.162) | 0.755 |
| Fever | 2.583 | (0.979–6.811) | 0.055 |
| Cold and/or sore throat | 0.435 | (0.223–0.847) | 0.014 |
| Blood eosinophils < 2% at exacerbation | 0.871 | (0.451–1.681) | 0.680 |
| CRP < 6 mg/L | Reference | ||
| CRP 6–18 mg/L | 2.886 | (1.123–7.419) | 0.028 |
| CRP > 18 mg/L | 5.723 | (2.273–14.407) | < 0.001 |
BMI body mass index, FEV1 forced expiratory volume in 1 s, CRP C-reactive protein
Clustered multivariate logistic regression analysis, including the patient as a random effect, for 313 exacerbations (63 with infiltrate, 250 without) with complete data for all the variables included in the model. Other independent variables included in the regression model were influenza and pneumococcal vaccine in the year prior to enrolment
arefers to the use of either a long acting beta agonist or long acting muscarinic antagonist, alone or in combination with other inhaled medication
CRP ranges based on categorisation by tertiles