The impacts of morning, daytime, and nighttime symptoms on disease burden in real-world patients with COPD

Anna Muñoz,1 Mark Small,2 Robert Wood,3 Anna Ribera,1 Javier Nuevo4 1Formerly of Global Medical Affairs, AstraZeneca PLC, Barcelona, Spain; 2Respiratory Research, Adelphi Real World, Macclesfield, UK; 3Real World Evidence and Epidemiology, Adelphi Real World, Macclesfield, UK; 4Global Me...

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Main Authors: Muñoz A, Small M, Wood R, Ribera A, Nuevo J
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Dove Medical Press 2018-05-01
Series:International Journal of COPD
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.dovepress.com/the-impacts-of-morning-daytime-and-nighttime-symptoms-on-disease-burde-peer-reviewed-article-COPD
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spelling doaj-d5b304ae28b84243835bd88f77420c352020-11-25T01:43:07ZengDove Medical PressInternational Journal of COPD1178-20052018-05-01Volume 131557156838319The impacts of morning, daytime, and nighttime symptoms on disease burden in real-world patients with COPDMuñoz ASmall MWood RRibera ANuevo JAnna Muñoz,1 Mark Small,2 Robert Wood,3 Anna Ribera,1 Javier Nuevo4 1Formerly of Global Medical Affairs, AstraZeneca PLC, Barcelona, Spain; 2Respiratory Research, Adelphi Real World, Macclesfield, UK; 3Real World Evidence and Epidemiology, Adelphi Real World, Macclesfield, UK; 4Global Medical Affairs, AstraZeneca PLC, Madrid, Spain Background: Respiratory symptoms are increasingly recognized as an important consideration in COPD management. Understanding the links between the time(s) of day symptoms are experienced and overall symptom burden could support personalized management strategies. This real-world study aimed to establish the association between the time of day of symptoms and the burden on patients using validated patient-reported outcomes, health care resource utilization, and physician-perceived impact of COPD on patients’ lives. Materials and methods: Analyses used data from four waves (2012, 2013, 2014, and 2016) of the Respiratory Disease Specific Programme: cross-sectional surveys of patients with COPD in Germany, Italy, Spain, and the UK. Patients were classified by their physicians as having symptoms in the morning (M), daytime (D), and/or nighttime (N) in the 4 weeks before entering the Disease Specific Programme. Outcomes included health care resource utilization, work productivity and activity impairment, COPD Assessment Test, EuroQol 5-dimension 3-level questionnaire with visual analog scale, and Jenkins Sleep Evaluation Questionnaire. Results: In total, 8,844 patients were included, and 8,185 had evaluable time-of-day symptom data. Physicians reported that in the previous 4 weeks, 25% of patients experienced no symptoms, 16% D only, 17% M/D only, 6% D/N only, 4% M, N, or M/N only, and 32% M/D/N. In general, patients with M/D/N symptoms utilized more health care resources in the previous 12 months, had more prior exacerbations, and reported worse activity impairment, health status, and sleep than other symptom groups, whereas patients with symptoms at any time of the day utilized more resources, experienced more exacerbations, and reported worse health status than patients with no symptoms during the 4 weeks before entering the survey. Conclusion: Patients experiencing morning, daytime, and nighttime symptoms experience a greater disease burden than those in other groups. An individualized approach to COPD treatment based on the timing and persistence of symptoms may improve outcomes for these patients. Keywords: work productivity, health status, health care resource utilization, activity impairment, sleep, real worldhttps://www.dovepress.com/the-impacts-of-morning-daytime-and-nighttime-symptoms-on-disease-burde-peer-reviewed-article-COPDCOPDsymptomshealthcare resource utilizationactivity impairmentsleepreal-world
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Muñoz A
Small M
Wood R
Ribera A
Nuevo J
spellingShingle Muñoz A
Small M
Wood R
Ribera A
Nuevo J
The impacts of morning, daytime, and nighttime symptoms on disease burden in real-world patients with COPD
International Journal of COPD
COPD
symptoms
healthcare resource utilization
activity impairment
sleep
real-world
author_facet Muñoz A
Small M
Wood R
Ribera A
Nuevo J
author_sort Muñoz A
title The impacts of morning, daytime, and nighttime symptoms on disease burden in real-world patients with COPD
title_short The impacts of morning, daytime, and nighttime symptoms on disease burden in real-world patients with COPD
title_full The impacts of morning, daytime, and nighttime symptoms on disease burden in real-world patients with COPD
title_fullStr The impacts of morning, daytime, and nighttime symptoms on disease burden in real-world patients with COPD
title_full_unstemmed The impacts of morning, daytime, and nighttime symptoms on disease burden in real-world patients with COPD
title_sort impacts of morning, daytime, and nighttime symptoms on disease burden in real-world patients with copd
publisher Dove Medical Press
series International Journal of COPD
issn 1178-2005
publishDate 2018-05-01
description Anna Muñoz,1 Mark Small,2 Robert Wood,3 Anna Ribera,1 Javier Nuevo4 1Formerly of Global Medical Affairs, AstraZeneca PLC, Barcelona, Spain; 2Respiratory Research, Adelphi Real World, Macclesfield, UK; 3Real World Evidence and Epidemiology, Adelphi Real World, Macclesfield, UK; 4Global Medical Affairs, AstraZeneca PLC, Madrid, Spain Background: Respiratory symptoms are increasingly recognized as an important consideration in COPD management. Understanding the links between the time(s) of day symptoms are experienced and overall symptom burden could support personalized management strategies. This real-world study aimed to establish the association between the time of day of symptoms and the burden on patients using validated patient-reported outcomes, health care resource utilization, and physician-perceived impact of COPD on patients’ lives. Materials and methods: Analyses used data from four waves (2012, 2013, 2014, and 2016) of the Respiratory Disease Specific Programme: cross-sectional surveys of patients with COPD in Germany, Italy, Spain, and the UK. Patients were classified by their physicians as having symptoms in the morning (M), daytime (D), and/or nighttime (N) in the 4 weeks before entering the Disease Specific Programme. Outcomes included health care resource utilization, work productivity and activity impairment, COPD Assessment Test, EuroQol 5-dimension 3-level questionnaire with visual analog scale, and Jenkins Sleep Evaluation Questionnaire. Results: In total, 8,844 patients were included, and 8,185 had evaluable time-of-day symptom data. Physicians reported that in the previous 4 weeks, 25% of patients experienced no symptoms, 16% D only, 17% M/D only, 6% D/N only, 4% M, N, or M/N only, and 32% M/D/N. In general, patients with M/D/N symptoms utilized more health care resources in the previous 12 months, had more prior exacerbations, and reported worse activity impairment, health status, and sleep than other symptom groups, whereas patients with symptoms at any time of the day utilized more resources, experienced more exacerbations, and reported worse health status than patients with no symptoms during the 4 weeks before entering the survey. Conclusion: Patients experiencing morning, daytime, and nighttime symptoms experience a greater disease burden than those in other groups. An individualized approach to COPD treatment based on the timing and persistence of symptoms may improve outcomes for these patients. Keywords: work productivity, health status, health care resource utilization, activity impairment, sleep, real world
topic COPD
symptoms
healthcare resource utilization
activity impairment
sleep
real-world
url https://www.dovepress.com/the-impacts-of-morning-daytime-and-nighttime-symptoms-on-disease-burde-peer-reviewed-article-COPD
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