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COPD Clinical Control: predictors and long-term follow-up of the CHAIN cohort

Citation

Calle Rubio M, Rodriguez Hermosa JL, de Torres JP, Marín JM, Martínez-González C, Fuster A, Cosío BG, Peces-Barba G, Solanes I, Feu-Collado N, Lopez-Campos JL, Casanova C; CHAIN Study Investigators. COPD Clinical Control: predictors and long-term follow-up of the CHAIN cohort. Respir Res. 2021 Feb 4;22(1):36.

Abstract

134 patients (16.8%) were considered persistently controlled, 248 (31.1%) persistently uncontrolled and 416 (52.1%) changed control status during follow-up. The variables significantly associated with persistent control were not requiring triple therapy at baseline and having a better quality of life. Annual changes in outcomes (health status, psychological status, airflow limitation) did not differ in patients, regardless of clinical control status. All-cause mortality was lower in persistently controlled patients (5.5% versus 19.1%, p = 0.001). The hazard ratio for all-cause mortality was 2.274 (95% CI 1.394–3.708; p = 0.001). Regarding pharmacological treatment, triple inhaled therapy was the most common option in persistently uncontrolled patients (72.2%). Patients with persistent disease control more frequently used bronchodilators for monotherapy (53%) at recruitment, although by the end of the follow-up period, 20% had scaled up their treatment, with triple therapy being the most frequent therapeutic pattern.

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