BMJ Open (Apr 2023)

EXAcerbations of COPD and their OutcomeS on CardioVascular diseases (EXACOS-CV) Programme: protocol of multicountry observational cohort studies

  • Jennifer K Quint,
  • Hana Müllerova,
  • Clementine Nordon,
  • Nathaniel M Hawkins,
  • Jonathan Marshall,
  • Sami O Simons,
  • Kirsty Rhodes,
  • Claus F Vogelmeier,
  • Mario Ouwens,
  • Edeltraut Garbe

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1136/bmjopen-2022-070022
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 4

Abstract

Read online

Introduction In patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), the risk of certain cardiovascular (CV) events is increased by threefold to fivefold in the year following acute exacerbation of COPD (AECOPD), compared with a non-exacerbation period. While the effect of severe AECOPD is well established, the relationship of moderate exacerbation or prior exacerbation to elevated risk of CV events is less clear. We will conduct cohort studies in multiple countries to further characterise the association between AECOPD and CV events.Methods and analysis Retrospective longitudinal cohort studies will be conducted within routinely collected electronic healthcare records or claims databases. The study cohorts will include patients meeting inclusion criteria for COPD between 1 January 2014 and 31 December 2018. Moderate exacerbation is defined as an outpatient visit and/or medication dispensation/prescription for exacerbation; severe exacerbation is defined as hospitalisation for COPD. The primary outcomes of interest are the time to (1) first hospitalisation for a CV event (including acute coronary syndrome, heart failure, arrhythmias or cerebral ischaemia) since cohort entry or (2) death. Time-dependent Cox proportional hazards models will compare the hazard of a CV event between exposed periods following exacerbation (split into these periods: 1–7, 8–14, 15–30, 31–180 and 181–365 days) and the unexposed reference time period, adjusted on time-fixed and time-varying confounders.Ethics and dissemination Studies have been approved in Canada, Japan, the Netherlands, Spain and the UK, where an institutional review board is mandated. For each study, the results will be published in peer-reviewed journals.