AI Article Synopsis

  • Hypoxemia in fibrotic interstitial lung disease (ILD) signals disease progression and can predict patient mortality.
  • A risk prediction tool was created to identify new-onset exertional and resting hypoxemia using data from ILD registries in Canada, Australia, and the U.S.
  • The model's effectiveness was assessed, showing good performance based on factors like age, body mass index, and specific lung function measures, although the validation cohort showed some issues with calibration for resting hypoxemia.

Article Abstract

Hypoxemia in fibrotic interstitial lung disease (ILD) indicates disease progression and is of prognostic significance. The onset of hypoxemia signifies disease progression and predicts mortality in fibrotic ILD. Accurately predicting new-onset exertional and resting hypoxemia prompts appropriate patient discussion and timely consideration of home oxygen. We derived and externally validated a risk prediction tool for both new-onset exertional and new-onset resting hypoxemia. This study used ILD registries from Canada for the derivation cohort and from Australia and the United States for the validation cohort. New-onset exertional and resting hypoxemia were defined as nadir oxyhemoglobin saturation < 88% during 6-minute-walk tests, resting oxyhemoglobin saturation < 88%, or the initiation of ambulatory or continuous oxygen. Candidate predictors included patient demographics, ILD subtypes, and pulmonary function. Time-varying Cox regression was used to identify the top-performing prediction model according to Akaike information criterion and clinical usability. Model performance was assessed using Harrell's C-index and goodness-of-fit (GoF) likelihood ratio test. A categorized risk prediction tool was developed. The best-performing prediction model for both new-onset exertional and new-onset resting hypoxemia included age, body mass index, a diagnosis of idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis, and percent predicted forced vital capacity and diffusing capacity of carbon monoxide. The risk prediction tool exhibited good performance for exertional hypoxemia (C-index, 0.70; GoF,  = 0.85) and resting hypoxemia (C-index, 0.77; GoF,  = 0.27) in the derivation cohort, with similar performance in the validation cohort except calibration for resting hypoxemia (GoF,  = 0.001). This clinically applicable risk prediction tool predicted new-onset exertional and resting hypoxemia at 6 months in the derivation cohort and a diverse validation cohort. Suboptimal GoF in the validation cohort likely reflected overestimation of hypoxemia risk and indicated that the model is not flawed because of underestimation of hypoxemia.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1513/AnnalsATS.202303-208OCDOI Listing

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