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Breathlessness and exercise performance to predict mortality in long-term oxygen therapy - The population-based DISCOVERY study. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • * A study evaluated breathlessness and exercise performance in 441 patients starting LTOT between 2015 and 2018, finding that exercise performance is a strong predictor of overall and short-term mortality, while breathlessness was not consistently significant.
  • * The findings suggest that exercise performance assessments, particularly the 30s-Sit-To-Stand test, can help identify patients at higher risk of mortality, potentially guiding better management and follow-up strategies.

Article Abstract

Background: Patients with chronic respiratory failure treated with long-term oxygen therapy (LTOT) often have severe breathlessness, impaired exercise performance, and high but variable mortality that is difficult to predict. We aimed to evaluate breathlessness and exercise performance upon starting LTOT as predictors of overall and short-term mortality.

Methods: This was a longitudinal, population-based study of patients who initiated LTOT between 2015 and 2018 in Sweden. Breathlessness was measured using the Dyspnea Exertion Scale, and exercise performance using the 30s-Sit-To-Stand test. Associations with overall and three-month mortality were analyzed using Cox-regression. Subgroup analyses were performed for patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) and interstitial lung disease (ILD) respectively. The predictive capacity of models was assessed using a C-statistic.

Results: A total of 441 patients (57.6% female, aged 75.4 ± 8.3 years) were analyzed, of whom 141 (32%) died during a median follow-up of 260 (IQR 75-460) days. Both breathlessness and exercise performance were independently associated with overall mortality in the crude models, but only exercise performance remained independently associated with overall mortality when models were adjusted for other predictors, when short-term mortality was analyzed, or when breathlessness and exercise capacity were analyzed concurrently. The multivariable model including exercise performance but not breathlessness provided a relatively high predictive capacity for overall mortality, C-statistic 0.756 (95% CI 0.702-0.810). Similar results were seen in the COPD and ILD subgroups.

Conclusion: Exercise performance as measured by the 30s-STS may be useful to identify patients with higher mortality on LTOT for optimized management and follow-up.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.rmed.2023.107306DOI Listing

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