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A Concise Workup of COPD E. James Britt, MD Common diseases are common 3rd leading cause of mortality COPD is overlooked Women > men but underdiagnosed Core w/u is simple We will quickly outline an office eval We will review goals of therapy, and how and what goals can be met today Natural History of COPD (Fletcher and Peto) Never smoked or not susceptible to smoke 100 Forced Expiratory Volume in 1 Second (FEV1) [% of Value at Age 25] 75 50 Smoke regularly and susceptible to its effects Stopped at age 45 Disability 25 Stopped at age 65 Death * * 0 25 50 75 Age (Years) * Death due to irreversible chronic obstructive lung disease. Reprinted with permission from Fletcher C, Peto R. The natural history of chronic airflow obstruction. Br Med J. 1977;1(6077):1645-1648 COPD Mortality in the United States Absolute No. Deaths per 100,000 70 Not What You Would Suspect? 1980-2000 Men 60 Women 50 40 30 20 10 0 1980 1985 1990 1995 Year Mannino et al. MMWR Morb Mortal Wkly Rep. 2002;51(SS-6):1-16. 2000 Questioning a patient thought to have COPD Cough, SOB, Chest Pain • Smoker? • Childhood allergies, asthma? • SOB: – House/apartment, 1-3 floors? – Up/down at will; once daily; ask others? – Yard work, laundry, mail,daily errands, trapped? – Arm work? – Nocturnal attacks? • Hospital or ER? • Medication Review Criteria for Diagnosis of COPD • Clinical history – Exposure: smoke, other – Symptoms: cough, sputum, dyspnea • Functional assessment – – – – Spirometry (FEV1, forced vital capacity [FVC], and FEV1/FVC ratio) Oxygenation Lung volumes Diffusion capacity • Anatomic assessment – Chest x-ray – High resolution CT scan Pauwels RA, et al, on behalf of the GOLD Scientific Committee. Am J Respir Crit Care Med. 2001;163:1256-1276. Prognosis of Airways Obstruction in Tuscon >age 65 Pharmacologic RX of COPD • • • • • • • Short Acting Bronchodilators Long Acting Maintanance Drugs Supplemental Medications Meds to Rx Exacerbations Meds to Prevent Exacerbations Medications to Preserve Lung Function Medications to Reduce Mortality Short Acting Bronchodilators • Beta Agonist Family – Pro Air; Proventil; Ventolin; Albuterol; Xopinex $40-$45 • Anticholinergic Family – Atrovent, • Combination – Combivent; Respimat $210 Long Acting Bronchodilators • Anticholinergics – Tiotropium; Aclidinium $250 • Beta Agonists Salmeterol, Formoterol, Indacaterol $250 • Steroid/Beta Agonist Combinations – Advair 250/50; Salmeterol 160/4.5 $250 Supplemental Medications • Theophylline Theophylline1 • If response to initial anticholinergic/2-agonist therapy suboptimal, consider adding theophylline • Long-acting formulations generally preferred – Modest bronchodilation, mild anti-inflammatory effects • Useful for noncompliant patients and those who have trouble with inhalation aerosols and those preferring oral drugs 1. NCAP. J Respir Dis. 2000;21(suppl):S5-S21. Medications to Prevent Exacerbations • Rofumulast $300 • Azithromycin PD4 Inhibitors-Roflumilast • Six and Twelve month data document decreased exacerbations in a COPD cohort with recurrent exacerbations of chronic bronchitis and use of inhalled glucorticoids • Limited by headache, nausea, diarrhea and weight loss • **Never gone head-head against theophylline • Many in pipeline…special interest in inhalled Azithromycin and COPD • COPD consortium: UMMD/Scharf (Albert) • 250 mg AZ/d 570 patients • Time to Exacerbation extended by 92 days – Placebo=174d – Risk Rate • Placebo=1.83/yr Az=266d Az=1.48/yr • Limited by ototoxicity, cardiac toxicity, drug-drug toxicity Recommendation for Azithromycin Use in COPD • • • • • • • • >= 2 exacerbation/yr Compliant patient Pulse <100 QT<450 msec. SGOT/SGPT < 3X normal No QT drugs Hearing OK, Audiogram ? Exclude high cardiac risk patient Principal of Mix & Match Combination therapy • My role here is that of a shopping assistant really recommending ways in which a patient may mix and match medications to achieve goals…challenging given the $$ involved Escalating Menu of Choices A moderate to severe patient • • • • • Long acting anticholinergic Steroid/Long act beta agonist Long acting beta agonist Short acting rescue drug Preventitave drug $260 $250 $120 $ 50 $300 Prevention of Relapse • Tiotropium and two Steroid/beta agonist maintanance inhalers have secondary endpoint claims from large long-term studies. • Additional preventative strategies were reviewed Preservation of Lung function • No major studies document preservation of lung function at this time. It remains the elusive goal. Statins • Observations – Diminished decline in PFT – Decreased ER & H documented • COPD Consortium: STATSCOPE – 3 yr 1000 participants – ? Direct effect on COPD – ? Indirect benefit thru heart disease Improve exercise performance • Both long acting anticholinergics and long acting beta agonists have data that show increased esercise time and or endurance oner two months of regular use likely thru the lung volume reduction effect Tiotropium Exercise Trial: Endurance Time During Constant Work Exercise Exercise duration (seconds) Placebo (n=91) Tiotropium (n=96) 700 ** * 600 + 105.2 sec + 21.4 % + 66.8 sec + 13.6 % 500 491.7 sec 400 -5 0 * p<0.05 ** p<0.01 Baseline O’Donnell et all ERJ 2004 (in press). 5 10 15 20 Days 25 30 35 40 45 ACP Clinical Practice Guidelines COPD • • • • • • Spirometry to dx airflow obstruction, but not to screen Stable FEV1 60-80% bronchodilators MAY be used Stable FEV1 <60% monotherapy with long act bd FEV1<60% Rx LAMA or LABA patient pref, cost, adverse event profile May adm combination rx for symptomatic pts Rehab for <50% FEV1 O2 for resting hypoxemia, usual guidelines