Blood eosinophils on hospital admission for COPD exacerbation do not predict the recurrence of moderate and severe relapses

Background and objective The relationship between hospitalisation with an eosinophilic acute exacerbation of COPD (AE-COPD) and future relapses is unclear. We aimed to explore this association by following 152 patients for 12 months after hospital discharge or until their first moderate or severe fl...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Balázs Csoma, András Bikov, Ferenc Tóth, György Losonczy, Veronika Müller, Zsófia Lázár
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: European Respiratory Society 2021-02-01
Series:ERJ Open Research
Online Access:http://openres.ersjournals.com/content/7/1/00543-2020.full
id doaj-51146f5c782f485c8ce643ed2f22c258
record_format Article
spelling doaj-51146f5c782f485c8ce643ed2f22c2582021-04-06T10:24:08ZengEuropean Respiratory SocietyERJ Open Research2312-05412021-02-017110.1183/23120541.00543-202000543-2020Blood eosinophils on hospital admission for COPD exacerbation do not predict the recurrence of moderate and severe relapsesBalázs Csoma0András Bikov1Ferenc Tóth2György Losonczy3Veronika Müller4Zsófia Lázár5 Department of Pulmonology, Semmelweis University, Budapest, Hungary Department of Pulmonology, Semmelweis University, Budapest, Hungary Multitárs Ltd, Budapest, Hungary Department of Pulmonology, Semmelweis University, Budapest, Hungary Department of Pulmonology, Semmelweis University, Budapest, Hungary Department of Pulmonology, Semmelweis University, Budapest, Hungary Background and objective The relationship between hospitalisation with an eosinophilic acute exacerbation of COPD (AE-COPD) and future relapses is unclear. We aimed to explore this association by following 152 patients for 12 months after hospital discharge or until their first moderate or severe flare-up. Methods Patients hospitalised with AE-COPD were divided into eosinophilic and non-eosinophilic groups based on full blood count results on admission. All patients were treated with a course of systemic corticosteroid. The Cox proportional hazards model was used to study the association with the time to first re-exacerbation; a generalised linear regression model was applied to identify clinical variables related to the recurrence of relapses. Results We did not find a difference in the time to the next moderate or severe exacerbation between the eosinophilic (≥2% of total leukocytes and/or ≥200 eosinophils·µL−1, n=51, median (interquartile range): 21 (10–36) weeks) and non-eosinophilic groups (n=101, 17 (9–36) weeks, log-rank test: p=0.63). No association was found when other cut-off values (≥3% of total leukocytes and/or ≥300 eosinophils·µL−1) were used for the eosinophilic phenotype. However, the higher number of past severe exacerbations, a lower forced expiratory volume in 1 s (FEV1) at discharge and higher pack-years were related to shorter exacerbation-free time. According to a subgroup analysis (n=73), 48.1% of patients with initial eosinophilic exacerbations had non-eosinophilic relapses on readmission. Conclusions Our data do not support an increased risk of earlier recurring moderate or severe relapses in patients hospitalised with eosinophilic exacerbations of COPD. Eosinophilic severe exacerbations present a variable phenotype.http://openres.ersjournals.com/content/7/1/00543-2020.full
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Balázs Csoma
András Bikov
Ferenc Tóth
György Losonczy
Veronika Müller
Zsófia Lázár
spellingShingle Balázs Csoma
András Bikov
Ferenc Tóth
György Losonczy
Veronika Müller
Zsófia Lázár
Blood eosinophils on hospital admission for COPD exacerbation do not predict the recurrence of moderate and severe relapses
ERJ Open Research
author_facet Balázs Csoma
András Bikov
Ferenc Tóth
György Losonczy
Veronika Müller
Zsófia Lázár
author_sort Balázs Csoma
title Blood eosinophils on hospital admission for COPD exacerbation do not predict the recurrence of moderate and severe relapses
title_short Blood eosinophils on hospital admission for COPD exacerbation do not predict the recurrence of moderate and severe relapses
title_full Blood eosinophils on hospital admission for COPD exacerbation do not predict the recurrence of moderate and severe relapses
title_fullStr Blood eosinophils on hospital admission for COPD exacerbation do not predict the recurrence of moderate and severe relapses
title_full_unstemmed Blood eosinophils on hospital admission for COPD exacerbation do not predict the recurrence of moderate and severe relapses
title_sort blood eosinophils on hospital admission for copd exacerbation do not predict the recurrence of moderate and severe relapses
publisher European Respiratory Society
series ERJ Open Research
issn 2312-0541
publishDate 2021-02-01
description Background and objective The relationship between hospitalisation with an eosinophilic acute exacerbation of COPD (AE-COPD) and future relapses is unclear. We aimed to explore this association by following 152 patients for 12 months after hospital discharge or until their first moderate or severe flare-up. Methods Patients hospitalised with AE-COPD were divided into eosinophilic and non-eosinophilic groups based on full blood count results on admission. All patients were treated with a course of systemic corticosteroid. The Cox proportional hazards model was used to study the association with the time to first re-exacerbation; a generalised linear regression model was applied to identify clinical variables related to the recurrence of relapses. Results We did not find a difference in the time to the next moderate or severe exacerbation between the eosinophilic (≥2% of total leukocytes and/or ≥200 eosinophils·µL−1, n=51, median (interquartile range): 21 (10–36) weeks) and non-eosinophilic groups (n=101, 17 (9–36) weeks, log-rank test: p=0.63). No association was found when other cut-off values (≥3% of total leukocytes and/or ≥300 eosinophils·µL−1) were used for the eosinophilic phenotype. However, the higher number of past severe exacerbations, a lower forced expiratory volume in 1 s (FEV1) at discharge and higher pack-years were related to shorter exacerbation-free time. According to a subgroup analysis (n=73), 48.1% of patients with initial eosinophilic exacerbations had non-eosinophilic relapses on readmission. Conclusions Our data do not support an increased risk of earlier recurring moderate or severe relapses in patients hospitalised with eosinophilic exacerbations of COPD. Eosinophilic severe exacerbations present a variable phenotype.
url http://openres.ersjournals.com/content/7/1/00543-2020.full
work_keys_str_mv AT balazscsoma bloodeosinophilsonhospitaladmissionforcopdexacerbationdonotpredicttherecurrenceofmoderateandsevererelapses
AT andrasbikov bloodeosinophilsonhospitaladmissionforcopdexacerbationdonotpredicttherecurrenceofmoderateandsevererelapses
AT ferenctoth bloodeosinophilsonhospitaladmissionforcopdexacerbationdonotpredicttherecurrenceofmoderateandsevererelapses
AT gyorgylosonczy bloodeosinophilsonhospitaladmissionforcopdexacerbationdonotpredicttherecurrenceofmoderateandsevererelapses
AT veronikamuller bloodeosinophilsonhospitaladmissionforcopdexacerbationdonotpredicttherecurrenceofmoderateandsevererelapses
AT zsofialazar bloodeosinophilsonhospitaladmissionforcopdexacerbationdonotpredicttherecurrenceofmoderateandsevererelapses
_version_ 1721538433879375872