dyspnea in copd · wedzicha, j., et al., nejm, 2016. om y) ∆=–0.25, p

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SGK/SGP 2016 Dyspnea in COPD Prof. Michael Tamm Head of Pneumology and Comprehesive Lung Center University Hospital Basel

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Page 1: Dyspnea in COPD · Wedzicha, J., et al., NEJM, 2016. om y) ∆=–0.25, P

SGK/SGP 2016

Dyspnea in COPD

Prof. Michael TammHead of Pneumology and Comprehesive

Lung Center University Hospital Basel

Page 2: Dyspnea in COPD · Wedzicha, J., et al., NEJM, 2016. om y) ∆=–0.25, P

GOLD GuidelinesFE

V1

% p

red

> 8

0%

50

-80

%

30

-50

%<3

0%

MMRC0 – 1 2 – 4

Nu

mb

er o

f A

ECO

PD

0 –

1=

>2

Assessments:

- Symptoms

- Airflow obstruction

- Risk of AECOPD

- Comorbidities

A) Low risk, less symptoms

B) Low risk, more symptoms

C) High risk, less symptoms

D) High risk, more symptoms

Page 3: Dyspnea in COPD · Wedzicha, J., et al., NEJM, 2016. om y) ∆=–0.25, P

Dyspnea in COPD

• Bodyplethysmography

– FEV1 ? reversibility ? NO ?

– hyperinflation ?

• Diffusion capacity

– proportional/disproportional ?

• Blood gases

– pO2 pCO2

• CT thorax

– bronchiectasis/mucuspluging/emphysema

Page 4: Dyspnea in COPD · Wedzicha, J., et al., NEJM, 2016. om y) ∆=–0.25, P

Dyspnea in COPD

• Echo

– LEF

– Diastolic dysfunction

– Pulmonary hypertension

• Ev MPS

• SPECT

– thromboembolic disease

– potential for LVR

Page 5: Dyspnea in COPD · Wedzicha, J., et al., NEJM, 2016. om y) ∆=–0.25, P

PH-COPD in end-stage COPD

Page 6: Dyspnea in COPD · Wedzicha, J., et al., NEJM, 2016. om y) ∆=–0.25, P

PH-COPD in end-stage COPD

210 199

16

25 35

Page 7: Dyspnea in COPD · Wedzicha, J., et al., NEJM, 2016. om y) ∆=–0.25, P

PAH vs. PH-COPD

Page 8: Dyspnea in COPD · Wedzicha, J., et al., NEJM, 2016. om y) ∆=–0.25, P

PAH vs. PH-COPD

Page 9: Dyspnea in COPD · Wedzicha, J., et al., NEJM, 2016. om y) ∆=–0.25, P

PAH vs. PH-COPD: CPET

Page 10: Dyspnea in COPD · Wedzicha, J., et al., NEJM, 2016. om y) ∆=–0.25, P

PAH vs. PH-COPD: CPET

Page 11: Dyspnea in COPD · Wedzicha, J., et al., NEJM, 2016. om y) ∆=–0.25, P

PAH vs. PH-COPD: CPET

Page 12: Dyspnea in COPD · Wedzicha, J., et al., NEJM, 2016. om y) ∆=–0.25, P

PAH vs. PH-COPD: CPET

Page 13: Dyspnea in COPD · Wedzicha, J., et al., NEJM, 2016. om y) ∆=–0.25, P

PH-COPD: Endothelin ReceptorAntagonists

• Distance walked in 6 min– Bosentan group: 339 ± 81 to 329 ± 94 m at week 12; p = 0.040)

– Placebo group: 331 ± 116 to 331 ± 123 m at week 12; p = 0.100)

• Arterial PO2– Bosentan group: 65.2 ± 10.5, 58.8 ± 8.6 and 60.7 ± 7.5 mmHg at

baseline, 4 weeks and 12 weeks, respectively

– Placebo group: 66.1 ± 15.1, 64.4 ± 6.9 and 65.7 ± 10.9 mmHg, respectively.

Page 14: Dyspnea in COPD · Wedzicha, J., et al., NEJM, 2016. om y) ∆=–0.25, P

• FEV1: 51.3 ± 31,4 %pred

• mPAP at rest: 31.3 ± 7.3 mmHg

• PCWP: 12.8 ± 5.6 mmHg

PH-COPD: aerosolized Iloprost

Page 15: Dyspnea in COPD · Wedzicha, J., et al., NEJM, 2016. om y) ∆=–0.25, P

Hyperinflation in COPD= Dyspnea

Page 16: Dyspnea in COPD · Wedzicha, J., et al., NEJM, 2016. om y) ∆=–0.25, P

TORCH Study

• 6000 Patients 3 years

• Primary endpoint:

Mortality

• Sekundary endpoints:

– Exacerbations

– Lung function

– Quality of life /Dyspnea

Fluticason

Fluticason + Salmeterol

Calverley et al, NEJM 2007

Page 17: Dyspnea in COPD · Wedzicha, J., et al., NEJM, 2016. om y) ∆=–0.25, P

Calverley et al. NEJM 2007

Page 18: Dyspnea in COPD · Wedzicha, J., et al., NEJM, 2016. om y) ∆=–0.25, P

Calverley et al. NEJM 2007

Page 19: Dyspnea in COPD · Wedzicha, J., et al., NEJM, 2016. om y) ∆=–0.25, P

Calverley et al. NEJM 2007

Page 20: Dyspnea in COPD · Wedzicha, J., et al., NEJM, 2016. om y) ∆=–0.25, P

ICS/LABA TORCH

• Quality of Life Scores yes

• FEV1 yes

• FEV1 decline no

• Hyperinflation ?

• VO2/endurance/6 min distance?

• Exacerbations yes

• Comorbidities ?

• Mortality no/yes

Page 21: Dyspnea in COPD · Wedzicha, J., et al., NEJM, 2016. om y) ∆=–0.25, P

UPLIFT Study

Primary endpoint:

– FEV1 (Slope of decline)

Sekundary endpoints:

– Quality of life

– Exacerbations

– Mortality

6000 Patients 4 years Tiotropium versus Placebo

70% ICS and/or LABA

Page 22: Dyspnea in COPD · Wedzicha, J., et al., NEJM, 2016. om y) ∆=–0.25, P

Tiotropium

Control

0 6 12 24 30 36 42 4818

Hazard ratio = 0.87

95% CI: (0.76, 0.99)

P = 0.034 (log-rank test)

20

15

10

5

0

Pro

ba

bil

ity o

f d

ea

th f

rom

an

y c

au

se

[%

]

Months

Mortality

Page 23: Dyspnea in COPD · Wedzicha, J., et al., NEJM, 2016. om y) ∆=–0.25, P

Exacerbations

0

20

40

60

80

0 6 12 18 24 30 36 42 48

Pro

ba

bilit

y o

f e

xa

ce

rba

tio

n (

%)

Tiotropium Control

Hazard ratio = 0.86,

(95% CI, 0.81, 0.91)

p < 0.0001 (log-rank test)

Month

Page 24: Dyspnea in COPD · Wedzicha, J., et al., NEJM, 2016. om y) ∆=–0.25, P

FEV1

1.00

1.10

1.20

1.30

1.40

1.50

FE

V1 (

L)

Tiotropium Control

* **

**

**

**

0

6 12 18 24 30 36 42 480 1

Month

* * **

** * *

*

Post-Bronch FEV1

= 47 – 65 mL

Pre-Bronch FEV1

= 87 – 103 mL

*P<0.0001 vs. control

Page 25: Dyspnea in COPD · Wedzicha, J., et al., NEJM, 2016. om y) ∆=–0.25, P

Quality of Life

35

40

45

50

SG

RQ

To

tal

Sc

ore

(U

nit

s) Tiotropium (n = 2478) Control (n = 2337)

0

6 12 18 24 30 36 42 480

Month

* **

** *

**

Imp

rovem

en

t

SGRQ Total Score = 2.3 units

*P<0.0001 vs. control

Page 26: Dyspnea in COPD · Wedzicha, J., et al., NEJM, 2016. om y) ∆=–0.25, P

Tiotropium UPLIFT

• Quality of Life Scores yes

• FEV1 yes

• FEV1 decline no

• Hyperinflation ?

• VO2/endurance/6 min distance ?

• Exacerbations yes

• Comorbidities ?

• Mortality no/yes

Page 27: Dyspnea in COPD · Wedzicha, J., et al., NEJM, 2016. om y) ∆=–0.25, P

WISDOM Studie

Primary endpoint

Time to 1st moderate or severe on-treatment exacerbation during 12-month randomised period

Magnussen H et al. Withdrawal of Inhaled Glucocorticoids and Exazerbations of COPD. Respir Med 2014;108:593-9

Secondary endpoints

Included lung function, health status (SGRQ) and dyspnea (mMRC)

Page 28: Dyspnea in COPD · Wedzicha, J., et al., NEJM, 2016. om y) ∆=–0.25, P

Estimated probability of moderate or severe COPD exacerbation

1243

1242

1059

1090

927

965

827

825

763

740

646

646

694

688

615

607

581

570

14

19

No. at risk

ICS

ICS withdrawal

0.6

0.4

0.2

0.0

0 6 12 18 24 30 36 42 48 54

ICS

ICS withdrawalEstim

ate

d p

rob

ab

ility

Time to events (weeks)

0.1

0.3

0.5

Hazard ratio, 1.06 (95% CI, 0.94–1.19)

P=0.35 by Wald’s chi-squared test

Magnussen H et al. Withdrawal of Inhaled Glucocorticoids and Exazerbations of COPD. Respir Med 2014;108:593-9

Page 29: Dyspnea in COPD · Wedzicha, J., et al., NEJM, 2016. om y) ∆=–0.25, P

Adju

ste

d m

ean (

SE

) change

from

baselin

e in

FE

V1

(mL)

**p<0.01; ***p<0.0001 vs ICS; restricted maximum likelihood repeated measures model; baseline values 970 mL for ICS, 981 mL for ICS withdrawal

Week

ICS

ICS withdrawal

***

**

1223

1218

1135

1135

1114

1092

1077

1058

970

935

n

ICS withdrawal

ICS

38 mL

43 mL

100 µg BID 0 µg (placebo)250 µg BID

Mean change from baseline in lung function: FEV1

ICS withdrawal

Magnussen H et al. Withdrawal of Inhaled Glucocorticoids and Exazerbations of COPD. Respir Med 2014;108:593-9

Page 30: Dyspnea in COPD · Wedzicha, J., et al., NEJM, 2016. om y) ∆=–0.25, P

FLAME STUDY

0 6 12 19 26 32 38 5245

0

10

20

30

40

50

60

70

80

90

100

Wa

hrs

ch

ein

lic

hk

eit

r e

ine

Ex

aze

rba

tio

n (

%)

Hazard ratio, 0.84

(95% CI, 0.78-0.91) P<0.001

Alle

16%

Risiko-

Reduktion

Hazard ratio, 0.78

(95% CI, 0.70-0.86) P<0.001

Moderate oder schwere

22%

Risiko-

Reduktion

Hazard ratio, 0.81

(95% CI, 0.66-1.00) P=0.046

schwere

(Hospitalisationen)

19%

Risiko-

Reduktion

Indacaterol/Glycopyrr. 110/50 μg, 1x tgl.

Salmeterol/Fluticason 50/500 μg, 2x tgl.

Wedzicha, J., et al., NEJM, 2016

Page 31: Dyspnea in COPD · Wedzicha, J., et al., NEJM, 2016. om y) ∆=–0.25, P

Zeit (Tage)

An

ge

pa

sste

r m

ittle

rer

SG

RQ

-C-

Ge

sa

mts

co

re

48

47

46

45

44

43

42

Tag 0

(Baseline)

0Tag 29 Tag 85 Tag 183 Tag 267 Tag 365

Mittlerer LS-

Unterschied = -

1,3

P < 0,001

Mittlerer LS-

Unterschied = -

1,2

P = 0,001

Mittlerer LS-

Unterschied = -

1,3

P = 0,003

Mittlerer LS-

Unterschied = -

1,8

P < 0,001

Mittlerer LS-

Unterschied =

0

P = NS

Salmeterol/Fluticason 50/500 μg 2x tgl. (n = 1593)

Indacaterol/Glycopyrronium 110/50 μg 1x tgl. (n = 1602)

Verb

esseru

ng

SGRQ-C-Responder*: Indacaterol/Glycopyrronium 49,2 %; Salmeterol/Fluticason 43,7 %

(OR 1,30; P < 0,001)Analyse der mITT. *Ansprechen definiert als eine Verbesserung von ≥ 4 Einheiten im SGRQ-C

LABA/LAMA significantly improved Quality of Life as compared to LABA/ICS

Wedzicha, J., et al., NEJM, 2016

Page 32: Dyspnea in COPD · Wedzicha, J., et al., NEJM, 2016. om y) ∆=–0.25, P

∆=–0.25, P<0.001

Ad

just

ed m

ean

ch

ange

in r

escu

e m

edic

atio

n u

se f

rom

b

asel

ine

(pu

ffs/

day

)

0

–0.25

–0.50

–0.75

–1.0

–1.25

–1.5

32

Baseline rescue medication use was 4 puffs per day, on average, in both treatment groups

LABA/LAMA significantly decreased rescue medication use compared with LABA/ICS at Week 52

Wedzicha et al. N Engl J Med, 2016

Page 33: Dyspnea in COPD · Wedzicha, J., et al., NEJM, 2016. om y) ∆=–0.25, P

Exercise ToleranceTiotropium vs. Placebo

Maltais F et al. Chest 2005; 128: 1168-1178

450

550

650

750

850

-10 0 10 20 30 40 50

Sekunden

Belastungsdauer

+ 236 s

+ 41,5%

* *

#

# p < 0,05

* p < 0,01

Tiotropium (n = 131)

Placebo (n = 130)

Studientag

Page 34: Dyspnea in COPD · Wedzicha, J., et al., NEJM, 2016. om y) ∆=–0.25, P

Exercise ToleranceTiotropium plus Rehabilitation vs. Placebo plus Reha

Casaburi R et al. Chest 2005; 127:809-817

Belastungsdauer

* * * p < 0,05 Tiotropium ( 55)

Placebo (n = 53)

Studienwoche

+ 42%+ 32%

+ 16%

Rehabilitation8

12

16

20

24

0 4 8 12 16 20 24

Min

ute

n

Page 35: Dyspnea in COPD · Wedzicha, J., et al., NEJM, 2016. om y) ∆=–0.25, P

LVR Indication

• FEV1 < 35 % • TLC > 125 %• RV > 200 %• RV/TLC > 0.6• 6’ Gehtest < 300 m• VO2max < 12 ml/kg/min

Page 36: Dyspnea in COPD · Wedzicha, J., et al., NEJM, 2016. om y) ∆=–0.25, P

SPECT

Page 37: Dyspnea in COPD · Wedzicha, J., et al., NEJM, 2016. om y) ∆=–0.25, P

National Emphysema Treatment Trial

Page 38: Dyspnea in COPD · Wedzicha, J., et al., NEJM, 2016. om y) ∆=–0.25, P

LVRS – FEV1

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

50

Prä OP 3M 6M 9 M 12M 15M 18M

Verlauf

FE

V1%

FEV1 % VC MAX

Page 39: Dyspnea in COPD · Wedzicha, J., et al., NEJM, 2016. om y) ∆=–0.25, P

LVRS – Air Trapping

40

50

60

70

Prä OP 3M 6M 9 M 12M 15M 18M

Verlauf

RV

% T

LC

Mean RV % TLC

Page 40: Dyspnea in COPD · Wedzicha, J., et al., NEJM, 2016. om y) ∆=–0.25, P

Bronchoscopic LVR

Page 41: Dyspnea in COPD · Wedzicha, J., et al., NEJM, 2016. om y) ∆=–0.25, P

Valves: efficacy predictors

Page 42: Dyspnea in COPD · Wedzicha, J., et al., NEJM, 2016. om y) ∆=–0.25, P
Page 43: Dyspnea in COPD · Wedzicha, J., et al., NEJM, 2016. om y) ∆=–0.25, P

Coils: Long term Follow-up

Page 44: Dyspnea in COPD · Wedzicha, J., et al., NEJM, 2016. om y) ∆=–0.25, P

Summary

• Dyspnea in COPD can be caused by

– Hyperinflation

– Emphysema/ diffusion problem

– Pulmonary hypertension

– Comorbidities

• Treatment is mainly based on bronchodilatation and REHAB

• In specific cases, oxygen, lung volume reduction, transplantation