학술논문

Risk of Death and Cardiovascular Events Following an Exacerbation of COPD: The EXACOS-CV US Study
Document Type
Report
Source
International Journal of Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease. January 31, 2024, Vol. 19, p225, 17 p.
Subject
Online database
Medical research -- Health aspects
Medicine, Experimental -- Health aspects
Corticosteroids -- Research
Lung diseases, Obstructive -- Research -- Risk factors
Online databases -- Rankings
Epidemiology -- Health aspects -- Research
Antibiotics -- Rankings -- Research
Type 2 diabetes -- Research -- Risk factors
Language
English
ISSN
1178-2005
Abstract
Purpose: This study estimated the magnitude and duration of risk of cardiovascular events and mortality following acute exacerbations of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (AECOPD), and whether risks varied by number and severity of exacerbation in a commercially insured population in the United States. Methods: This was a retrospective cohort study of newly diagnosed COPD patients [greater than or equal to]40 years old in the Healthcare Integrated Research Database from 2012 to 2019. Patients experiencing exacerbations comprised the "exacerbation cohort". Moderate exacerbations were outpatient visits with contemporaneous antibiotic or glucocorticoid administration; severe exacerbations were emergency department visits or hospitalizations for AECOPD. Follow-up started on the exacerbation date. Distribution of time between diagnosis and first exacerbation was used to assign index dates to the "unexposed" cohort. Cox proportional hazards models estimated risks of a cardiovascular event or death following an exacerbation adjusted for medical and prescription history and stratified by follow-up time, type of cardiovascular event, exacerbation severity, and rank of exacerbation (first, second, or third). Results: Among 435,925 patients, 170,236 experienced [greater than or equal to]1 exacerbation. Risk of death was increased for 2 years following an exacerbation and was highest during the first 30 days (any exacerbation hazard ratio (HR)=1.79, 95% CI=1.58-2.04; moderate HR=1.22, 95% CI=1.04-1.43; severe HR=5.09, 95% CI=4.30-6.03). Risks of cardiovascular events were increased for 1 year following an AECOPD and highest in the first 30-days (any exacerbation HR=1.34, 95% CI=1.23-1.46; moderate HR=1.23 (95% CI 1.12-1.35); severe HR=1.93 (95% CI=1.67-2.22)). Each subsequent AECOPD was associated with incrementally higher rates of both death and cardiovascular events. Conclusion: Risk of death and cardiovascular events was greatest in the first 30 days and rose with subsequent exacerbations. Risks were elevated for 1-2 years following moderate and severe exacerbations, highlighting a sustained increased cardiopulmonary risk associated with exacerbations. Keywords: COPD, cardiopulmonary, cardiac events, epidemiology, longitudinal studies
Introduction Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) is diagnosed in approximately 6% of Americans and is most prevalent in states along the Ohio and Mississippi Rivers where diminished access to care, [...]