| Literature DB >> 35418752 |
David Mannino1, James Siddall2, Mark Small2, Adam Haq2, Marjorie Stiegler3, Michael Bogart3.
Abstract
Purpose: There is a high prevalence of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) in the United States (US). Although guidelines are available for the treatment of COPD, evidence suggests that management of COPD in clinical practice is not always aligned with this guidance. This study aimed to further understand the current use of COPD maintenance medication in the US. Patients andEntities:
Keywords: COPD; inhaled corticosteroids; long-acting muscarinic antagonist; long-acting β2-agonist; maintenance therapy; survey
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35418752 PMCID: PMC8995154 DOI: 10.2147/COPD.S340794
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Chron Obstruct Pulmon Dis ISSN: 1176-9106
Figure 1Respiratory DSP survey: population sampled and data captured.
Patient and Disease Characteristics According to the Class of COPD Treatment Received
| Characteristic | All patients | ICS/LABA only | LAMA only | LAMA/LABA only | ICS/LABA + LAMA only | ICS/LAMA/LABA only |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| N = 800 | N = 213 (26.6%) | N = 104 (13.0%) | N = 109 (13.6%) | N = 117 (14.6%) | N = 84 (10.5%) | |
| Age (years), mean (SD) | 66.4 (10.9) | 63.5 (11.0) | 65.7 (10.9) | 67.8 (10.3) | 68.70 (8.8) | 67.50 (10.5) |
| Female, n (%) | 360 (45.0) | 97 (45.5) | 42 (40.4) | 47 (43.1) | 59 (50.4) | 37 (44.1) |
| Employment status, n (%) | ||||||
| Working full time | 197 (24.6) | 68 (31.9) | 33 (31.7) | 21 (19.3) | 15 (12.8) | 15 (17.9) |
| Working part time | 66 (8.3) | 26 (12.2) | 8 (7.7) | 5 (4.6) | 9 (7.7) | 6 (7.1) |
| On long-time sick leave | 6 (0.8) | 2 (0.9) | 0 (0.00) | 1 (0.9) | 2 (1.7) | 1 (1.2) |
| Homemaker | 50 (6.3) | 14 (6.6) | 6 (5.8) | 6 (5.5) | 4 (3.4) | 6 (7.1) |
| Retired | 451 (56.4) | 99 (46.5) | 55 (52.9) | 73 (67.0) | 79 (67.5) | 49 (58.3) |
| Unemployed | 26 (3.3) | 3 (1.4) | 2 (1.9) | 3 (2.8) | 7 (6.0) | 6 (7.1) |
| Unknown | 4 (0.5) | 1 (0.5) | 0 (0.00) | 0 (0.00) | 1 (0.9) | 1 (1.2) |
| Smoking status, n (%) | ||||||
| Current smoker | 174 (21.8) | 54 (25.4) | 21 (20.2) | 26 (23.9) | 20 (17.1) | 17 (20.2) |
| Ex-smoker | 523 (65.4) | 127 (59.6) | 71 (68.3) | 74 (67.9) | 87 (74.4) | 59 (70.2) |
| Never smoked | 90 (11.3) | 26 (12.2) | 11 (10.6) | 8 (7.3) | 9 (7.7) | 8 (9.5) |
| Unknown | 13 (1.6) | 6 (2.8) | 1 (1.0) | 1 (0.9) | 1 (0.9) | 0 (0.00) |
| BMI (kg/m2), mean (SD) | 27.2 (5.8) | 27.60 (5.4) | 26.60 (4.9) | 27.80 (6.8) | 27.10 (5.5) | 27.20 (5.0) |
| CCI, mean (SD) | 0.5 (1.1) | 0.4 (1.0) | 0.6 (1.5) | 0.4 (1.0) | 0.6 (1.2) | 0.7 (1.1) |
| Physician-perceived severity of current COPD, n (%) | ||||||
| Mild | 251 (31.4) | 87 (40.9) | 44 (42.3) | 31 (28.4) | 17 (14.5) | 7 (8.3) |
| Moderate | 395 (49.4) | 109 (51.2) | 55 (52.9) | 64 (58.7) | 53 (45.3) | 44 (52.4) |
| Severe | 111 (13.9) | 13 (6.1) | 3 (2.9) | 13 (11.9) | 33 (28.2) | 28 (33.3) |
| Very severe | 43 (5.4) | 4 (1.9) | 2 (1.9) | 1 (0.9) | 14 (12.0) | 5 (6.0) |
Notes: The table describes the 5 most commonly prescribed classes of maintenance treatment. Maintenance treatment classes may also include the use of short-acting treatments.
Abbreviations: BMI, body mass index; CCI, Charlson comorbidity index; ICS, inhaled corticosteroid; LABA, long-acting β2-agonist; LAMA, long-acting muscarinic antagonist; SD, standard deviation.
Patient and Disease Characteristics According to Physician Type Providing Data in the Survey
| Characteristic | PCP patients | Pulmonologist patients |
|---|---|---|
| N = 408a | N = 392b,c | |
| Age (years), mean (SD) | 67.3 (10.6) | 65.5 (11.1) |
| Female, n (%) | 187 (45.8) | 173 (44.1) |
| Unemployed/retired/sick leave due to COPD, n (%) | ||
| Yes | 11 (4.7) | 29 (11.6) |
| Smoking status, n (%) | ||
| Current smoker | 108 (26.5) | 66 (16.8) |
| Ex-smoker | 237 (58.1) | 286 (73.0) |
| Never smoked | 57 (14.0) | 33 (8.4) |
| Unknown | 6 (1.5) | 7 (1.8) |
| CCI, mean (SD) | 0.6 (1.2) | 0.4 (1.0) |
| Exacerbation frequency in last 12 months, mean (SD) | 0.9 (1.2) | 0.9 (1.1) |
| Physician-perceived COPD severity, n (%) | ||
| Mild | 163 (40.0) | 88 (22.5) |
| Moderate | 195 (47.8) | 200 (51.0) |
| Severe | 40 (9.8) | 71 (18.1) |
| Very severe | 10 (2.5) | 33 (8.4) |
| CAT score, mean (SD) | 19.3 (8.5) | 19.6 (9.3) |
| GOLD group, n (%) | ||
| A | 31 (12.8) | 29 (15.8) |
| B | 112 (46.1) | 65 (35.3) |
| C | 4 (1.7) | 4 (2.2) |
| D | 96 (39.5) | 86 (46.7) |
Notes: an = 243 for CAT score and GOLD groups; bn = 185 for CAT score; cn = 184 for GOLD group.
Abbreviations: CAT, COPD assessment test; CCI, Charlson comorbidity index; COPD, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease; GOLD, Global Initiative for Chronic Obstructive Lung Disease; PCP, primary care physician; SD, standard deviation.
COPD Medications Prescribed by Pulmonologists and Primary Care Physicians
| Currently prescribed COPD treatment, n (%) | PCP patients | Pulmonologist patients |
|---|---|---|
| N = 408 | N = 392 | |
| ICS/LABA only | 128 (31.4) | 85 (21.7) |
| LAMA only | 59 (14.5) | 45 (11.5) |
| LAMA/LABA only | 47 (11.5) | 62 (15.8) |
| ICS/LABA + LAMA | 56 (13.7) | 61 (15.6) |
| ICS/LAMA/LABA only | 29 (7.1) | 55 (14.0) |
| Short-acting only | 34 (8.3) | 24 (6.1) |
| ICS only | 6 (1.5) | 8 (2.0) |
| LABA only | 2 (0.5) | 11 (2.8) |
| LABA + LAMA | 3 (0.7) | 3 (0.8) |
| ICS + LABA | 1 (0.3) | 5 (1.3) |
| ICS + LAMA/LABA | 3 (0.7) | 3 (0.8) |
| ICS + LAMA | 3 (0.7) | 3 (0.8) |
| LAMA/LABA + LAMA | 3 (0.7) | 0 (0.0) |
| ICS + LABA + LAMA | 0 (0.0) | 5 (1.3) |
| ICS/LABA + ICS | 1 (0.3) | 3 (0.8) |
| LAMA/LABA + ICS/LABA | 1 (0.3) | 0 (0.0) |
| Other | 32 (7.8) | 19 (4.9) |
Notes: patients could be treated by multiple physician types; however, the data in this table are grouped according to the physician type who provided the information via the survey. Classifications with a slash (/) indicate combination medications, a plus (+) indicates separate inhalers. Maintenance treatment classes may also include the use of short-acting treatments.
Abbreviations: COPD, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease; ICS, inhaled corticosteroid; LABA, long-acting β2-agonist; LAMA, long-acting muscarinic antagonist; PCP, primary care physician.
Figure 2Prescriber of patients’ current COPD treatment regimen.
Figure 3Patient adherence to prescribed COPD treatment (physician reported).
Figure 4Most common reasons (>25% of responses) cited by PCPs and pulmonologists for (A) choice of current prescribed treatment and (B) a change to current treatment.
Patient Profiles and Most Frequently Selected Classes of COPD Therapy (in >5% of Patients in Either Arm)
| Therapy class chosen for patient type, n (%) | PCP patients | Pulmonologist patients |
|---|---|---|
| N = 43 | N = 32 | |
| Treatment choices, % | ICS/LABA (53.5%) | ICS/LAMA/LABA (37.5%) |
| LAMA (32.6%) | ICS/LABA (28.1%) | |
| LAMA/LABA (18.6%) | LAMA/LABA (15.6%) | |
| ICS/LAMA/LABA (4.7%) | LAMA (15.6%) | |
| SABA (4.7%) | SABA (6.3%) | |
| PDE4i (2.3%) | LRA (9.4%) | |
| LRA (0%) | PDE4i (6.3%) | |
| Treatment choices, % | ICS/LABA (55.8%) | LAMA/LABA (40.6%) |
| LAMA/LABA (44.2%) | ICS/LAMA/LABA (28.1%) | |
| LAMA (37.2%) | ICS/LABA (28.1%) | |
| ICS/LAMA/LABA (7.0%) | LAMA (21.9%) | |
| SABA (7.0%) | SABA (9.4%) | |
| OCS (7.0%) | OCS (3.1%) | |
| Treatment choices, % | ICS/LABA (39.5%) | ICS/LABA (37.5%) |
| LAMA (30.2%) | LAMA/LABA (34.4%) | |
| LAMA/LABA (23.3%) | LAMA (31.3%) | |
| ICS/LAMA/LABA (16.3%) | ICS/LAMA/LABA (0%) | |
| ICS (9.3%) | ICS (0%) | |
| Treatment choices, % | ICS/LABA (55.8%) | LAMA/LABA (43.8%) |
| LAMA (30.2%) | ICS/LABA (28.1%) | |
| ICS/LAMA/LABA (23.3%) | LAMA (18.8%) | |
| OCS (20.9%) | ICS/LAMA/LABA (12.5%) | |
| LAMA/LABA (18.6%) | LABA (6.3%) | |
| PDE4i (11.6%) | PDE4i (6.3%) | |
| SABA (9.3%) | OCS (0%) |
Note: physicians were not limited to one choice of medication class for each patient profile.
Abbreviations: COPD, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease; ICS, inhaled corticosteroid; LABA, long-acting β2-agonist; LAMA, long-acting muscarinic antagonist; LRA, leukotriene receptor antagonist; OCS, oral corticosteroid; PCP, primary care physician; PDE4i, phosphodiesterase-4 inhibitor; SABA, short-acting bronchodilator.
Figure 5Physician-reported referral to COPD guidelines. Responses from PCPs (n = 43) and pulmonologists (n = 32) surveyed.