International Journal of COPD (Nov 2019)

Clinical And Economic Burden Of Eosinophilic COPD In A Large Retrospective US Cohort

  • Trudo F,
  • Kallenbach L,
  • Vasey J,
  • Chung Y,
  • Wilk A,
  • Slipski L,
  • O’Brien D,
  • Strange C

Journal volume & issue
Vol. Volume 14
pp. 2625 – 2637

Abstract

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Frank Trudo,1 Lee Kallenbach,2 Joseph Vasey,2 Yen Chung,1 Alan Wilk,2 Lukas Slipski,2 Dan O’Brien,2 Charlie Strange3 1Respiratory and Inflammation Therapeutic Area, AstraZeneca, Wilmington, DE, USA; 2Life Sciences, Practice Fusion, San Francisco, CA, USA; 3Department of Medicine, Medical University of South Carolina, Charleston, SC, USACorrespondence: Frank TrudoAstraZeneca Pharmaceuticals, 1800 Concord Pike, Wilmington, DE 19897, USAEmail [email protected]: We sought to describe clinical and economic outcomes for COPD patients by blood eosinophil (EOS) count.Methods: This retrospective cohort study of COPD patients used data from the Practice Fusion electronic medical records (EMR) database linked to Symphony Health Solutions transactional pharmacy, medical, outpatient, and inpatient claims data to evaluate COPD-related and all-cause health care resource utilization and cost in the 12-month period following the date of each patient’s greatest recorded blood eosinophil count during the 27-month period from January 2014 to March 2016. A post-index moderate exacerbation was defined as an outpatient or emergency care visit for COPD and a prescription for oral corticosteroid and/or antibiotics within 10 days of the visit. Severe exacerbation was defined as an inpatient hospitalization with COPD as primary diagnosis.Results: Of 48,090 EMR patients, 39,939 (83.1%) had a charge in the claims data both pre- and post-index (mean age 67.2 years, 58.3% female), 17,397 (43.6%) had EOS ≥220 cells/μL. Moderate and severe exacerbations were more frequent for patients with EOS≥220 cells/μL compared with those with EOS Conclusion: COPD patients with EOS counts ≥220 cells/μL were more likely to have had moderate or severe exacerbations and greater cost of care than those with EOS Keywords: clinical phenotypes, electronic medical records, exacerbations, health care resource utilization, eosinophils

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