Browsing by Author "Welte, Tobias (7007156174)"
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Publication Adrenomedullin refines mortality prediction by the BODE index in COPD: The BODE-A index(2014) ;Stolz, Daiana (57203082091) ;Kostikas, Kostantinos (6602272047) ;Blasi, Francesco (57211284402) ;Boersma, Wim (7004305076) ;Milenkovic, Branislava (23005307400) ;Lacoma, Alicia (22935190200) ;Louis, Renaud (55556102200) ;Aerts, Joachim G. (7102738026) ;Welte, Tobias (7007156174) ;Torres, Antoni (57205521091) ;Rohde, Gernot G. U. (35549640400) ;Boeck, Lucas (37006390100) ;Rakic, Janko (35750516200) ;Scherr, Andreas (47861324000) ;Hertel, Sabine (6701713997) ;Giersdorf, Sven (36551028000)Tamm, Michael (7006098027)The BODE (body mass index, airflow obstruction, dyspnoea, exercise capacity) index is wellvalidated for mortality prediction in chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD). Concentrations of plasma pro-adrenomedullin, a surrogate for mature adrenomedullin, independently predicted 2-year mortality among inpatients with COPD exacerbation. We compared accuracy of initial pro-adrenomedullin level, BODE and BODE components, alone or combined, in predicting 1-year or 2-year all-cause mortality in a multicentre, multinational observational cohort with stable, moderate to very severe COPD. Pro-adrenomedullin was significantly associated (p<0.001) with 1-year mortality (4.7%) and 2-year mortality (7.8%) and comparably predictive to BODE regarding both (C statistics 0.691 versus 0.745 and 0.635 versus 0.679, respectively). Relative to using BODE alone, adding pro-adrenomedullin significantly improved 1-year and 2-year mortality prognostication (C statistics 0.750 and 0.818, respectively; both p<0.001). Pro-adrenomedullin plus BOD was more predictive than the original BODE including 6-min walk distance. In multivariable analysis, pro-adrenomedullin (likelihood ratio Chi-squared 13.0, p<0.001), body mass index (8.5, p50.004) and 6-min walk distance (7.5, p50.006) independently foretold 2-year survival, but modified Medical Research Council dyspnoea score (2.2, p50.14) and forced expiratory volume in 1 s % predicted (0.3, p50.60) did not. Pro-adrenomedullin plus BODE better predicts mortality in COPD patients than does BODE alone; proadrenomedullin may substitute for 6-min walk distance in BODE when 6-min walk testing is unavailable. Copyright © ERS 2014. - Some of the metrics are blocked by yourconsent settings
Publication Exertional hypoxemia in stable COPD is common and predicted by circulating proadrenomedullin(2014) ;Stolz, Daiana (57203082091) ;Boersma, Wim (7004305076) ;Blasi, Francesco (57211284402) ;Louis, Renaud (55556102200) ;Milenkovic, Branislava (23005307400) ;Kostikas, Kostantinos (6602272047) ;Aerts, Joachim G. (7102738026) ;Rohde, Gernot (35549640400) ;Lacoma, Alicia (22935190200) ;Rakic, Janko (35750516200) ;Boeck, Lucas (37006390100) ;Castellotti, Paola (57191863143) ;Scherr, Andreas (47861324000) ;Marin, Alicia (7201715867) ;Hertel, Sabine (6701713997) ;Giersdorf, Sven (36551028000) ;Torres, Antoni (57205521091) ;Welte, Tobias (7007156174)Tamm, Michael (7006098027)BACKGROUND:The prevalence of exertional hypoxemia in unselected patients with COPD is unknown. Intermittent hypoxia leads to adrenomedullin (ADM) upregulation through the hypoxia-inducible factor-1 pathway. We aimed to assess the prevalence and the annual probability to develop exertional hypoxemia in stable COPD. We also hypothesized that increased ADM might be associated with exertional hypoxemia and envisioned that adding ADM to clinical variables might improve its prediction in COPD. METHODS:A total of 1,233 6-min walk tests and circulating proadrenomedullin (proADM) levels from 574 patients with clinically stable, moderate to very severe COPD enrolled in a multinational cohort study and followed up for 2 years were concomitantly analyzed. RESULTS:The prevalence of exertional hypoxemia was 29.1%. In a matrix derived from a fitted-multistate model, the annual probability to develop exertional hypoxemia was 21.6%. Exertional hypoxemia was associated with greater deterioration of specific domains of health-related quality of life, higher severe exacerbation, and death annual rates. In the logistic linear and conditional Cox regression multivariable analyses, both FEV 1% predicted and proADM proved independent predictors of exertional hypoxemia ( P<.001 for both). Adjustment for comorbidities, including cardiovascular disorders, and exacerbation rate did not influence results. Relative to using FEV 1% predicted alone, adding proADM resulted in a significant improvement of the predictive properties ( P = .018). Based on the suggested nonlinear nomogram, patients with moderate COPD (FEV 1% predicted 5 50%) but high proADM levels (>2 nmol/L) presented increased risk (>30%) for exertional desaturation. CONCLUSIONS:Exertional desaturation is common and associated with poorer clinical outcomes in COPD. ADM improves prediction of exertional desaturation as compared with the use of FEV 1% predicted alone. TRIAL REGISTRY:ISRCTN Register; No.:ISRCTN99586989; URL:www.controlled-trials.com © 2014 American College of Chest Physicians. - Some of the metrics are blocked by yourconsent settings
Publication Mannose-binding lectin protein and its association to clinical outcomes in COPD: A longitudinal study(2015) ;Mandal, Jyotshna (24466833100) ;Malla, Bijaya (57213607816) ;Steffensen, Rudi (55109841900) ;Costa, Luigi (55948897600) ;Egli, Adrian (24073168700) ;Trendelenburg, Marten (7005839924) ;Blasi, Francesco (57211284402) ;Kostikas, Kostantinos (6602272047) ;Welte, Tobias (7007156174) ;Torres, Antoni (57205521091) ;Louis, Renaud (55556102200) ;Boersma, Wim (7004305076) ;Milenkovic, Branislava (23005307400) ;Aerts, Joachim (7102738026) ;Rohde, Gernot G.U. (35549640400) ;Lacoma, Alicia (22935190200) ;Rentsch, Katharina (7004197043) ;Roth, Michael (57203543126) ;Tamm, Michael (7006098027)Stolz, Daiana (57203082091)Background: Functional deficiency of mannose-binding lectin (MBL) may contribute to the pathogenesis of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease. We hypothesized that specific MBL2 gene polymorphisms and circulating MBL protein levels are associated with clinically relevant outcomes in the Predicting Outcome using systemic Markers In Severe Exacerbations of COPD PROMISE-COPD cohort. Methods: We followed 277 patients with stable COPD GOLD stage II-IV COPD over a median period of 733 days (IQR 641-767) taking survival as the primary outcome parameter. Patients were dichotomized as frequent (≥2 AECOPD/year) or infrequent exacerbators. Serum MBL levels and single nucleotide polymorphisms of the MBL2 gene were assessed at baseline. Results: The MBL2-HYPD haplotype was significantly more prevalent in frequent exacerbators (OR: 3.33; 95 % CI, 1.24-7.14, p=0.01). The median serum MBL concentration was similar in frequent (607 ng/ml, [IQR; 363.0-896.0 ng/ml]) and infrequent exacerbators (615 ng/ml, [IQR; 371.0-942.0 ng/ml]). Serum MBL was not associated with lung function characteristics or bacterial colonization in sputum. However, high serum MBL at stable state was associated with better survival compared to low MBL (p=0.046, log rank test). Conclusions: In COPD, the HYPD haplotype of MBL2 gene is associated with frequent exacerbations and high serum MBL is linked to increased survival. The PROMISE-COPD study was registered at www.controlled-trials.comunder the identifier ISRCTN99586989. © 2015 Mandal et al. - Some of the metrics are blocked by yourconsent settings
Publication Prognostic assessment in COPD without lung function: The B-AE-D indices(2016) ;Boeck, Lucas (37006390100) ;Soriano, Joan B. (7101973935) ;Brusse-Keizer, Marjolein (25647333400) ;Blasi, Francesco (57211284402) ;Kostikas, Konstantinos (6602272047) ;Boersma, Wim (7004305076) ;Milenkovic, Branislava (23005307400) ;Louis, Renaud (55556102200) ;Lacoma, Alicia (22935190200) ;Djamin, Remco (6506973474) ;Aerts, Joachim (7102738026) ;Torres, Antoni (57205521091) ;Rohde, Gernot (35549640400) ;Welte, Tobias (7007156174) ;Martinez-Camblor, Pablo (24462229000) ;Rakic, Janko (35750516200) ;Scherr, Andreas (47861324000) ;Koller, Michael (59571434500) ;Van Der Palen, Job (7003461768) ;Marin, Jose M. (56261916700) ;Alfageme, Inmaculada (6602891624) ;Almagro, Pere (26321363400) ;Casanova, Ciro (57211633364) ;Esteban, Cristobal (7005218933) ;Soler-Cataluña, Juan J. (8974896500) ;De-Torres, Juan P. (6603893235) ;Miravitlles, Marc (57203200679) ;Celli, Bartolome R. (7007048536) ;Tamm, Michael (7006098027)Stolz, Daiana (57203082091)Several composite markers have been proposed for risk assessment in chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD). However, choice of parameters and score complexity restrict clinical applicability. Our aim was to provide and validate a simplified COPD risk index independent of lung function. The PROMISE study (n=530) was used to develop a novel prognostic index. Index performance was assessed regarding 2-year COPD-related mortality and all-cause mortality. External validity was tested in stable and exacerbated COPD patients in the ProCOLD, COCOMICS and COMIC cohorts (total n=2988). Using a mixed clinical and statistical approach, body mass index (B), severe acute exacerbations of COPD frequency (AE), modified Medical Research Council dyspnoea severity (D) and copeptin (C) were identified as the most suitable simplified marker combination. 0, 1 or 2 points were assigned to each parameter and totalled to B-AE-D or B-AE-D-C. It was observed that B-AE-D and B-AE-D-C were at least as good as BODE (body mass index, airflow obstruction, dyspnoea, exercise capacity), ADO (age, dyspnoea, airflow obstruction) and DOSE (dyspnoea, obstruction, smoking, exacerbation) indices for predicting 2-year all-cause mortality (c-statistic: 0.74, 0.77, 0.69, 0.72 and 0.63, respectively; Hosmer-Lemeshow test all p>0.05). Both indices were COPD specific (c-statistic for predicting COPD-related 2-year mortality: 0.87 and 0.89, respectively). External validation of B-AE-D was performed in COCOMICS and COMIC (c-statistic for 1-year all-cause mortality: 0.68 and 0.74; c-statistic for 2-year all-cause mortality: 0.65 and 0.67; Hosmer-Lemeshow test all p>0.05). The B-AE-D index, plus copeptin if available, allows a simple and accurate assessment of COPD-related risk. Copyright © ERS 2016. - Some of the metrics are blocked by yourconsent settings
Publication Therapy with proton-pump inhibitors for gastroesophageal reflux disease does not reduce the risk for severe exacerbations in COPD(2016) ;Baumeler, Luzia (57164036700) ;Papakonstantinou, Eleni (7003948513) ;Milenkovic, Branislava (23005307400) ;Lacoma, Alicia (22935190200) ;Louis, Renaud (55556102200) ;Aerts, Joachim G. (7102738026) ;Welte, Tobias (7007156174) ;Kostikas, Konstantinos (6602272047) ;Blasi, Francesco (57286960300) ;Boersma, Wim (7004305076) ;Torres, Antoni (57205521091) ;Rohde, Gernot G.U. (35549640400) ;Boeck, Lucas (37006390100) ;Rakic, Janko (35750516200) ;Scherr, Andreas (47861324000) ;Tamm, Michael (7006098027)Stolz, Daiana (57203082091)Background and objective: Gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD) symptoms are associated with a higher risk of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) exacerbation. We hypothesize that treatment with proton pump inhibitors reduces the risk of exacerbation in patients with stable COPD. Methods: A total of 638 patients with stable COPD for ≥6 weeks, ≥10 pack-years of smoking and Global Initiative for Chronic Obstructive Lung Disease II–IV seeking care in tertiary hospitals in eight European countries in the Predicting Outcome using Systemic Markers in Severe Exacerbations-COPD cohort was prospectively evaluated by us. Comorbidities including associated medical treatment were assessed at baseline, at exacerbation and at biannual visits. Median observation time was 24 months. The primary study outcomes were exacerbation and/or death. Results: A total of 85 (13.3%) of COPD patients were on anti-GERD therapy. These patients had higher annual and higher severe exacerbation rates (P = 0.009 and P = 0.002), decreased quality of life (SF-36: activity score P = 0.004, St. George's Respiratory Questionnaire: physical functioning P = 0.013 and social functioning P = 0.007), higher body mass airflow obstruction, dyspnea and exercise capacity index (P = 0.033) and Modified Medical Research Council scores (P = 0.002), shorter 6-min walking distance (P = 0.0004) and a higher adjusted Charlson score (P < 0.0001). Anti-GERD therapy was associated with a shorter time to severe exacerbation (HR 2.05 95% CI 1.37–3.08). Using three multivariable Cox-regression models, this association was independent of the following: (i) adjusted Charlson score and FEV1% predicted (HR 1.91 95% CI 1.26–2.90); (ii) adjusted Charlson score, body mass, airflow obstruction, dyspnea and exercise capacity index and Modified Medical Research Council (HR 1.62 95% CI 1.04–2.54); and (iii) adjusted Charlson score, FEV1% predicted and nine classes of medication for comorbidities (HR 1.63 95% CI 1.04–2.53). Conclusion: These findings suggest that patients with stable COPD receiving acid-suppressive therapy with proton pump inhibitors remain at high risk of frequent and severe exacerbations. © 2016 Asian Pacific Society of Respirology
