Literature DB >> 34350289

Phenotyping acute exacerbation of COPD: what more can we do for hospitalised patients?

Lai-Jian Cen1,2, Xiao-Xian Zhang1,2, Wei-Jie Guan1.   

Abstract

Hospitalised #AECOPD are characterised by multiple facets of aetiology. The clinical interpretation of the composite phenotypes of AECOPD and the robustness of the AECOPD phenotype need to be discussed further. https://bit.ly/3grzQEO.
Copyright ©The authors 2021.

Entities:  

Year:  2021        PMID: 34350289      PMCID: PMC8326715          DOI: 10.1183/23120541.00362-2021

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  ERJ Open Res        ISSN: 2312-0541


COPD is a complex and largely heterogeneous disease [1, 2]. The global prevalence of COPD is estimated to be 11.7% [3], with an estimated mortality in 2010 of around three million people [4]. The clinical management strategy has mostly been guided by the magnitude of airflow limitation, symptom burden and exacerbation risk [5]; however, these cannot fully take into account the heterogeneity of COPD. Acute exacerbations of COPD (AECOPDs) are defined as the significant worsening of respiratory symptoms which exceed the normal daily variations thus requiring changes to the current treatment [5]. AECOPD accounted for a substantial proportion of the socioeconomic burden of COPD [6], and a marked heterogeneity of the aetiology, pathophysiology and clinical manifestations of AECOPD existed [7]. In light of these heterogenous characteristics, efforts have been made to phenotype AECOPD [8]. There have been some studies focusing on the findings from clinical assessments or biomarker expression levels, highlighting the role of the exacerbation frequency [9], pathogen [10] and blood eosinophilia [11]. Nevertheless, most of these studies were restricted to the analysis of single biomarkers, some of which were not readily detectable in clinical practice, and phenotyping of AECOPD was mostly confined to the identification of infectious pathogens. In this issue of ERJ Open Research, MacDonald et al. [12] have explored a novel, comprehensive strategy to identify the aetiological phenotypes of AECOPD. In this prospective observational study, the phenotypes of AECOPD were identified through a constellation of metrics, ABCDEFGX, where: A=airway virus, B=bacterial, C=co-infection, D=depression/anxiety, E=eosinophils, F=cardiac failure, G=general environment, X=unknown. This study has underscored a clinically relevant issue; AECOPD was comprised of multiple phenotypes. On admission, 69.2% of the 146 hospitalised patients with AECOPD had more than one phenotype of AECOPD, and only ∼25% of patients had a single aetiology. Importantly, these phenotypes of AECOPD could be associated with clinically meaningful outcomes. For instance, patients who experienced infective exacerbations might have a greater risk of progressing to death within 12 months after hospital discharge. During convalescence, the Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale, blood eosinophil count and N-terminal pro-brain natriuretic peptide (NT-pro-BNP) levels remained significantly higher within the longitudinal follow-up than the levels among patients with AECOPD due to the aetiology of the D/E/F categories. To our knowledge, this is a pioneering study that mapped the composite aetiological phenotypes of AECOPD based on the metrics that were readily derived from the routine clinical assessments. The strategy that phenotyping AECOPD based on the aetiologies might have a role in optimising the management for AECOPDs should be verified in ongoing studies. In spite of this, there remain critical issues with regard to the clinical implications of the composite aetiologies and the robustness of AECOPD phenotypes. The study by MacDonald et al. [12] showed that most patients might have more than one aetiology triggering the onset of AECOPD upon meticulous phenotyping. Although the relatively small sample size has hindered further analysis that fully appreciated the complexity of AECOPD. Efforts that sought to elucidate the clinical significance of the multiple facets of AECOPD are warranted. First, patients with composite phenotypes of AECOPD might have poorer clinical outcomes. When analysing based on any single aetiology, elevated levels of cardiac biomarkers (aetiology ‘F’) was most common (detected in 71.2% of patients) upon the onset of AECOPD. However, patients with the infection plus the cardiac failure phenotype dominated in category ‘F’. This finding echoed the fact that chronic bronchial infection in COPD patients was associated with a higher incidence of cardiovascular events [13]. An unanswered question is whether infection and heart failure combined could further aggravate AECOPD compared with infection and heart failure alone. The present study revealed that co-existing infections were rather common among patients with AECOPD who had eosinophilic inflammation (16 (40%) out of 40). Previous studies have demonstrated that the inflammatory phenotypes of COPD were associated with the sputum microbial compositions [14] and that the sputum microbial compositions could accurately predict the risk of eosinophilic exacerbation of COPD [15]. However, there also existed a dilemma that patients with AECOPD who had blood eosinophilia might benefit from corticosteroid therapy [16], which would in turn increase the risk of infections [17]. A thorough evaluation of the spectrum of the aetiology of AECOPD may help maximise the clinical benefits of individualised treatment. Secondly, some composite aetiologies of AECOPD have also been the clinical manifestation of the comorbidities. Comorbidities have been fairly common in COPD patients and are important correlates of the poorer outcomes of AECOPD. In the present study, the pre-existing cardiovascular comorbidities might have accounted for the large proportion of category ‘F’, although some of the COPD patients without cardiovascular disease might also have elevated NT-pro-BNP levels during exacerbations [18]. In fact, NT-pro-BNP and cardiac troponin levels were also the strong predictors of the future risks of mortality in patients with AECOPD [19, 20]. Among patients with concomitant ischaemic heart disease, the risk of cardiovascular events was markedly increased during AECOPD or at least 90 days after [21]. Apart from these, depression or anxiety has been common among patients with COPD [22]. While 24.3% of patients were identified as belonging to the aetiology category ‘D’, depression or anxiety was present as the concurrent aetiology in this study. The results that depression or anxiety mostly occurred along with bacterial infection or cardiac failure could be partially reflected by the finding that psychiatric disorders were associated with cardiovascular comorbidities in COPD [23]. What remained less clear was whether the psychiatric disorders were more relevant to the comorbidities for COPD exacerbation. More metrics, such as obtaining a detailed medical history, might help to distinguish the pre-existing comorbidities from the trigger of AECOPD. Finally, the robustness of the AECOPD phenotypes over time is unclear because the current assessment was conducted at a single timepoint. In the present study, a large number of patients had evidence of infections during AECOPD, and had a greater risk of having a worse prognosis despite the fact that use of antibiotics or corticosteroids had been adjusted. In fact, it would be difficult to discriminate bacterial colonisation or viral detection from pathogen infection among patients with COPD [24, 25], although new-onset infection might have a more important role in predisposing to AECOPD. Indeed, the bacterial infection, but not viral detection, was more likely to be recurrent during subsequent AECOPD episodes, as revealed in a previously study [26]. Complete longitudinally follow-ups for multiple subsequent exacerbations and recoveries should be considered for illuminating the robustness of the AECOPD phenotype. Moreover, the eosinophilic COPD exacerbations were also more repeatable during subsequent AECOPD episodes [26], and were associated with an elevated blood eosinophil count in clinically stable COPD [27]. Since the robustness of AECOPD phenotypes was related to the clinically stable states, a complete longitudinal follow-up that consisted of stable-state exacerbations and convalescence should also be planned to thoroughly illuminate the relationship of phenotypes between steady-state COPD and exacerbations. In summary, profiling the complete spectrum of the phenotypes of AECOPD may be practical in clinical settings. More efforts should be made to unravel the clinical significance of the composite phenotypes of AECOPD on predicting the prognosis or therapeutic response, and to explore the robustness of AECOPD phenotype in follow-up studies.
  27 in total

1.  The sputum microbiome, airway inflammation, and mortality in chronic obstructive pulmonary disease.

Authors:  Alison J Dicker; Jeffrey T J Huang; Mike Lonergan; Holly R Keir; Christopher J Fong; Brandon Tan; Andrew J Cassidy; Simon Finch; Hana Mullerova; Bruce E Miller; Ruth Tal-Singer; James D Chalmers
Journal:  J Allergy Clin Immunol       Date:  2020-04-28       Impact factor: 10.793

2.  Deaths: preliminary data for 2011.

Authors:  Donna L Hoyert; Jiaquan Xu
Journal:  Natl Vital Stat Rep       Date:  2012-10-10

3.  Susceptibility to exacerbation in chronic obstructive pulmonary disease.

Authors:  John R Hurst; Jørgen Vestbo; Antonio Anzueto; Nicholas Locantore; Hana Müllerova; Ruth Tal-Singer; Bruce Miller; David A Lomas; Alvar Agusti; William Macnee; Peter Calverley; Stephen Rennard; Emiel F M Wouters; Jadwiga A Wedzicha
Journal:  N Engl J Med       Date:  2010-09-16       Impact factor: 91.245

4.  Chronic bronchial infection and incident cardiovascular events in chronic obstructive pulmonary disease patients: A long-term observational study.

Authors:  Miguel Ángel Martinez-Garcia; Rosa Faner; Grace Oscullo; David la Rosa-Carrillo; Juan Jose Soler-Cataluña; Marta Ballester; Alfonso Muriel; Alvar Agusti
Journal:  Respirology       Date:  2021-05-18       Impact factor: 6.424

Review 5.  Risk of cardiovascular comorbidity in patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease: a systematic review and meta-analysis.

Authors:  Wenjia Chen; Jamie Thomas; Mohsen Sadatsafavi; J Mark FitzGerald
Journal:  Lancet Respir Med       Date:  2015-07-22       Impact factor: 30.700

6.  Significance of NT-pro-BNP in acute exacerbation of COPD patients without underlying left ventricular dysfunction.

Authors:  Muhammad Adrish; Varalaxmi Bhavani Nannaka; Edison J Cano; Bharat Bajantri; Gilda Diaz-Fuentes
Journal:  Int J Chron Obstruct Pulmon Dis       Date:  2017-04-13

7.  The clinical and economic burden of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease in the USA.

Authors:  Anthony J Guarascio; Shauntá M Ray; Christopher K Finch; Timothy H Self
Journal:  Clinicoecon Outcomes Res       Date:  2013-06-17

8.  Respiratory infectious phenotypes in acute exacerbation of COPD: an aid to length of stay and COPD Assessment Test.

Authors:  Meng-Yuan Dai; Jin-Ping Qiao; Yuan-Hong Xu; Guang-He Fei
Journal:  Int J Chron Obstruct Pulmon Dis       Date:  2015-10-20

9.  Longitudinal profiling of the lung microbiome in the AERIS study demonstrates repeatability of bacterial and eosinophilic COPD exacerbations.

Authors:  David Mayhew; Nathalie Devos; Christophe Lambert; James R Brown; Stuart C Clarke; Viktoriya L Kim; Michal Magid-Slav; Bruce E Miller; Kristoffer K Ostridge; Ruchi Patel; Ganesh Sathe; Daniel F Simola; Karl J Staples; Ruby Sung; Ruth Tal-Singer; Andrew C Tuck; Stephanie Van Horn; Vincent Weynants; Nicholas P Williams; Jeanne-Marie Devaster; Tom M A Wilkinson
Journal:  Thorax       Date:  2018-01-31       Impact factor: 9.139

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