Data di Pubblicazione:
2014
Abstract:
Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) is a major cause of morbidity and mortality in industrialized countries. Recent studies investigated the impact of comorbidities on the survival in COPD, but most of them lacked a referent group of comorbidity-matched, nonobstructed individuals. We examined the 10-year mortality in a sample of 200 COPD
patients and 201 nonobstructed controls. They were part of a larger
cohort enrolled in a European case-control study aimed at assessing
genetic susceptibility to COPD. By design, the COPD group included
patients with a forced expiratory volume in 1 second (FEV1) 70%
predicted. Cases and controls were matched on age, sex, and
cumulative smoking history, and shared a nearly identical prevalence
of cardiovascular and metabolic disorders. We estimated the hazard
of death with Cox regression and percentiles of survival with
Laplace regression. COPD was the main exposure variable of
interest. Five comorbidities (hypertension, coronary artery disease,
prior myocardial infarction, chronic heart failure, and diabetes) were
included as covariates in multiple regression models.
The all-cause mortality rate was significantly higher in cases than
in controls (43% vs 16%, P<0.001). The unadjusted hazard of death
for COPD was 3-fold higher than the referent category (P<0.001),
and remained nearly unchanged after introducing the 5 comorbidities
in multiple regression. Patients with COPD had significantly shorter
survival percentiles than comorbidity-matched controls (P<0.001).
Notably, 15% of the nonobstructed controls died by 10.3 years into
the study; the same proportion of COPD patients had died some
6 years earlier, at 4.6 years.
In a separate analysis, we split the whole sample into 2 groups
based on the lower tertile of FEV1 and carbon monoxide lung
diffusing capacity (DLCO). The hazard of death for COPD patients
with low FEV1 and DLCO was nearly 3.5-fold higher than in all the
others (P<0.001), and decreased only slightly after introducing age
and chronic heart failure as relevant covariates.
COPD is a strong predictor of reduced survival independently of
coexisting cardiovascular and metabolic disorders. Efforts should be
made to identify patients at risk and to ensure adherence to
prescribed therapeutic regimens
Tipologia CRIS:
01.01 Articolo in rivista
Elenco autori:
Monti, Simonetta; Pavlickova, Ivana
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