(Press-News.org) ATS 2013, PHILADELPHIA ─ Clinical measurement of physical activity appears to be an independent predictor of whether or not patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) will end up being hospitalized, according to a new study conducted by researchers in Connecticut. The study also corroborates an earlier investigation that linked higher levels of inactivity with an increased incidence of hospitalizations among patients with COPD.
The results of the study will be presented at the ATS 2013 International Conference.
"Physical inactivity is common in patients with COPD and appears to predict poor outcome, including more frequent hospitalizations, compared to COPD patients who have higher levels of exercise," said study lead author Sheila Zanoria, MD, resident at the University of Connecticut Health Center in Farmington, Conn. "This remains true even when accounting for other factors that may be present.
"Our study evaluated levels of physical activity and other respiratory measurements, including the six-minute walk distance (6MWD),which measures the distance a patient is able to walk in six minutes," she said. "Then we examined the relationship between those baseline measurements and the subsequent hospitalization rate among the same patients over a four- to five-year follow-up period.
"Ideally, we hoped to identify specific measurements that could be used proactively to help identify which patients are most at risk for hospitalization," Dr. Zanoria added.
The retrospective study looked at baseline data collected from 60 COPD patients in 2008 and compared that data with the number of hospitalizations that occurred during the follow-up period. Initial baseline data were collected from each patient during a period of seven consecutive days. During that time, each patient wore a tri-axial accelerometer, a device worn at the waist and used to measure physical activity in units called vector magnitude units, or VMUs. VMUs are typically measured continually and then summed up every minute to provide usable data.
During the same seven-day period, researchers also evaluated patients' exercise capacity using the 6MWD, supplemental oxygen use and forced expiratory volume in one second measurement, or FEV1, which measures the amount of air a patient is able to exhale in one second.
Next, researchers looked at the baseline data from each patient to determine if any measurements – singly or in combination – were associated with an increase in the number of subsequent hospitalizations during the follow-up period. Using outpatient and hospital databases, the researchers determined that 34 patients were hospitalized from any cause and 21 were hospitalized for respiratory disease-related illness during that period.
In the initial analysis of data from the study, the researchers noted that oxygen use, lower VMU levels and shorter 6MWD values all were associated with greater numbers of overall and respiratory-related hospitalizations after adjusting for disease severity variables. However, in the multivariate testing, only 6MWD and VMU remained as predictive of hospitalizations.
"Specifically, what we found was that patients who were able to walk less than 350 meters during the 6MWD and who had VMU scores of under 150 were significantly more likely to be hospitalized, either for respiratory-related causes or for any cause," Dr. Zanoria said.
"These results underscore the importance of both of these variables in assessing COPD severity," she added. "Knowing this may help clinicians expand their efforts in COPD management towards improving physical activity levels of their patients, thereby hopefully reducing healthcare utilization."
###
* Please note that numbers in this release may differ slightly from those in the abstract. Many of these investigations are ongoing; the release represents the most up-to-date data available at press time.
Abstract 38462
Directly-Measured Physical Activity Predicts Subsequent Hospitalization In Patients With Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease
Type: Scientific Abstract
Category: 15.05 - Pulmonary Rehabilitation: Outcomes (PR)
Authors: S. Zanoria1, R. ZuWallack2; 1University of Connecticut Health Center - Farmington, CT/US, 2St Francis Hospital - Hartford, CT/US
Abstract Body
RATIONALE: Physical inactivity is common in patients with Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) and appears to predict poor outcome, even after controlling for other disease severity variables. To evaluate this further, we determined the relationship between baseline levels of directly measured physical activity and subsequent hospitalizations.
METHODS: In 2008, physical activity was measured for 7 consecutive days in 60 patients with COPD (50% female, age 68 ±11 years, FEV1 53 ± 18%) using tri-axial accelerometers (RT-3) worn at the waist. Other assessments at that time included the forced expiratory volume in 1 second (FEV1), supplemental oxygen requirement, and the six minute walk distance (6MWD). Movements in three planes were summed for each minute (vector magnitude units, VMU). After adjusting for non-use (Hecht et al. Methodology for Using Long-Term Accelerometry Monitoring to Describe Daily Activity Patterns in COPD. COPD 2009; 6:121-129) VMU were related to subsequent respiratory-related and total hospitalizations using Cox proportional hazards analyses. Outpatient and hospital databases were used to determine hospitalizations.
RESULTS: Over 1549 ± 225 days, 34 (57%) were hospitalized from any cause and 21 (35%) were hospitalized for respiratory disease. Predictors of all-cause, and respiratory-related hospitalizations in univariate analyses were: 1) Oxygen use: hazard ratios 3.2 (p. = 0.001) and 4.6 (p. = 0.0008), respectively; 2) 6MWD < 350m: hazard ratios 4.5 (p. = 0.001) and 9.2 (p. = 0.003), respectively; and 3) mean adjusted VMU < 150: hazard ratios 2.7 (p. = 0.006) and 5.2 (p. = 0.0007), respectively. In multiple regression, the combination of 6MWD < 350 m and VMU < 150 significantly predicted both all-cause and respiratory-related hospitalizations.
CONCLUSIONS:Lower levels of directly-measured physical activity significantly predict subsequent all-cause and respiratory-related hospitalizations in patients with COPD. This corroborates findings by previous investigators (Garcia-Rio et al, Chest 2012). In multiple regression, both a lower level of physical activity and shorter six minute walk distance predict hospitalizations, underscoring the importance of both of these variables in assessing COPD severity.
Exercise levels may predict hospitalizations in COPD population
2013-05-21
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Monoclonal antibody appears effective and safe in asthma Phase IIa trial
2013-05-21
ATS 2013, PHILADELPHIA ─ A novel approach to obstructing the runaway inflammatory response implicated in some types of asthma has shown promise in a Phase IIa clinical trial, according to U. S. researchers.
Their research will be presented at the American Thoracic Society 2013 International Conference and published simultaneously online in the New England Journal of Medicine.
The randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial tested the efficacy and safety of the monoclonal antibody, dupilumab, in patients with "persistent, moderate-to-severe asthma" and elevated ...
Teens exposed to schoolmate's death by suicide much more likely to consider or attempt suicide
2013-05-21
Youth who had a schoolmate die by suicide are significantly more likely to consider or attempt suicide, according to a study in published in CMAJ (Canadian Medical Association Journal). This effect can last 2 years or more, which has implications for strategies following schoolmate suicides.
"We found that exposure to suicide predicts suicidality," writes senior author Dr. Ian Colman, Canada Research Chair in Mental Health Epidemiology and Assistant Professor, University of Ottawa, with lead author Sonja Swanson, from Harvard School of Public Health, Boston. "This was ...
Treatment with A1-PI slows the progression of emphysema in Alpha-1 antitrypsin deficiency
2013-05-21
ATS 2013, PHILADELPHIA─Treatment with an Alpha-1 proteinase inhibitor (A1-PI), a naturally occurring protein that protects lung tissue from breakdown and protects the lung's elasticity, is effective in slowing the progression of emphysema in patients with Alpha-1 antitrypsin deficiency (AATD), a life-threatening genetic disorder, according to a new study presented at the 2013 American Thoracic Society International Conference.
The study showed the efficacy of A1-PIin preventing the loss of lung tissue as measured by computed tomography (CT) scan lung density at ...
Small but speedy: Short plants live in the evolutionary fast lane
2013-05-21
Durham, NC — Biologists have known for a long time that some creatures evolve more quickly than others. Exactly why isn't well understood, particularly for plants. But it may be that height plays a role, says Robert Lanfear of Australian National University and the U. S. National Evolutionary Synthesis Center.
In a study to be published 21 May in the journal Nature Communications, Lanfear and colleagues report that shorter plants have faster-changing genomes.
Drawing from a database of global patterns in plant height for more than 20,000 species, the researchers estimated ...
Genetic predictors of postpartum depression uncovered by Hopkins researchers
2013-05-21
The epigenetic modifications, which alter the way genes function without changing the underlying DNA sequence, can apparently be detected in the blood of pregnant women during any trimester, potentially providing a simple way to foretell depression in the weeks after giving birth, and an opportunity to intervene before symptoms become debilitating.
The findings of the small study involving 52 pregnant women are described online in the journal Molecular Psychiatry.
"Postpartum depression can be harmful to both mother and child," says study leader Zachary Kaminsky, Ph.D., ...
Child maltreatment increases risk of adult obesity
2013-05-21
Children who have suffered maltreatment are 36% more likely to be obese in adulthood compared to non-maltreated children, according to a new study by King's College London. The authors estimate that the prevention or effective treatment of 7 cases of child maltreatment could avoid 1 case of adult obesity.
The findings come from the combined analysis of data from 190,285 individuals from 41 studies worldwide, published this week in Molecular Psychiatry.
Severe childhood maltreatment (physical, sexual or emotional abuse or neglect) affects approximately 1 in 5 children ...
Origins of human culture linked to rapid climate change
2013-05-21
Rapid climate change during the Middle Stone Age, between 80,000 and 40,000 years ago, during the Middle Stone Age, sparked surges in cultural innovation in early modern human populations, according to new research.
The research, published this month in Nature Communications, was conducted by a team of scientists from Cardiff University's School of Earth and Ocean Sciences, the Natural History Museum in London and the University of Barcelona.
The scientists studied a marine sediment core off the coast of South Africa and reconstructed terrestrial climate variability ...
Study finds vitamin C can kill drug-resistant TB
2013-05-21
VIDEO:
Dr. William Jacobs, Jr. has determined that vitamin C kills drug-resistant tuberculosis (TB) bacteria in laboratory culture. The paper was published online May 21, 2013 in Nature Communications. Dr. Jacobs...
Click here for more information.
May 21, 2013 — (Bronx, NY) — In a striking, unexpected discovery, researchers at Albert Einstein College of Medicine of Yeshiva University have determined that vitamin C kills drug-resistant tuberculosis (TB) bacteria in laboratory ...
14 closely related crocodiles existed around 5 million years ago
2013-05-21
Nowadays, the most diverse species of crocodile are found in northern South America and Southeast Asia: As many as six species of alligator and four true crocodiles exist, although no more than two or three ever live alongside one another at the same time. It was a different story nine to about five million years ago, however, when a total of 14 different crocodile species existed and at least seven of them occupied the same area at the same time, as an international team headed by paleontologists Marcelo Sánchez and Torsten Scheyer from the University of Zurich is now ...
Insight into the dazzling impact of insulin in cells
2013-05-21
Australian scientists have charted the path of insulin action in cells in precise detail like never before. This provides a comprehensive blueprint for understanding what goes wrong in diabetes.
The breakthrough study, conducted by Sean Humphrey and Professor David James from Sydney's Garvan Institute of Medical Research, is now published in the early online edition of the prestigious journal Cell Metabolism.
First discovered in 1921, the insulin hormone plays a very important role in the body because it helps us lower blood sugar after a meal, by enabling the movement ...