Journal of Asthma and Allergy (Sep 2019)

Prevalence and impact of risk factors for poor asthma outcomes in a large, specialist-managed patient cohort: a real-life study

  • Tomisa G,
  • Horváth A,
  • Szalai Z,
  • Müller V,
  • Tamási L

Journal volume & issue
Vol. Volume 12
pp. 297 – 307

Abstract

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Gábor Tomisa,1,2 Alpár Horváth,1,2 Zsuzsanna Szalai,3 Veronika Müller,1 Lilla Tamási1 1Department of Pulmonology, Semmelweis University, Budapest 1125, Hungary; 2Chiesi Hungary Ltd, Budapest 1138, Hungary; 3Petz Aladár County Teaching Hospital, Győr 9023, HungaryCorrespondence: Gábor TomisaDepartment of Pulmonology, Semmelweis University, Diós árok 1/C, Budapest 1125, HungaryTel +36 20 978 6986Email [email protected]: Risk factors for poor asthma outcomes may have considerable influence on the control level and medical care of asthmatic patients. Our objective was to conduct a study that provides data on the level of symptom control and the frequency of specific risk factors for poor asthma outcomes on a large patient cohort.Methods: A cross-sectional, non-interventional real-life study was conducted among asthmatic patients treated by respiratory specialists in Hungary. Asthma control and risk factor assessment were done according to Global Initiative for Asthma guideline (Box 2–2). In the data analysis, phase descriptive statistics, graphical outputs, and Fisher’s exact tests were used.Results: Of 12743 patients enrolled by 187 specialists, asthma was well controlled in 36.0%, partially controlled in 29.29%, and uncontrolled in 34.71% of the cases. The most common comorbidities were rhinitis/sinusitis (66.84%), cardiovascular diseases (43.81%), and gastroesophageal reflux disease (20.11%). The following risk factors had the strongest relationship with uncontrolled disease: incorrect inhaler technique causing side effects (odds ratio, OR 4.86, 3.51–6.8), previous severe exacerbation (OR 4.79, 4.02–5.72), high short-acting beta agonist (SABA) use (OR 4.46, 4.03–4.93), incorrect inhaler technique associated with an exacerbation (OR 3.91, 3.06–5.03), and persistently low forced expiratory volume in 1 s (FEV1, OR 3.14, 2.8–3.52). The most frequent risk factors were smoking (OR 1.47, 1.36–1.59) and obesity (OR 1.34, 1.24–1.45). Furthermore, high loss of control was associated with an initial low FEV1 (OR 2.21, 2.01–2.44), frequent oral corticosteroid (OCS) use (OR 1.83, 1.64–2.05), poor adherence to treatment (OR 2.51, 2.21–2.86), and allergen exposure (OR 1.63, 1.47–1.81).Conclusions: This study indicated that the presence of risk factors for poor asthma outcomes listed by the Global Initiative for Asthma document significantly influenced actual control level in a real-world large patient cohort, with high SABA use, previous severe exacerbation, incorrect inhaler technique, persistently low FEV1, and poor adherence to treatment having the highest impact.Keywords: asthma, risk factors, poor outcomes, exacerbation, reliever use, comorbidity

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