Journal of Clinical Medicine (Jun 2022)

Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease in Elderly Patients with Acute and Advanced Heart Failure: Palliative Care Needs—Analysis of the EPICTER Study

  • Manuel Méndez-Bailón,
  • Noel Lorenzo-Villalba,
  • Miriam Romero-Correa,
  • Claudia Josa-Laorden,
  • Luis Inglada-Galiana,
  • Eva Menor-Campos,
  • Noelia Gómez-Aguirre,
  • Carolina Clemente-Sarasa,
  • Rosario Salas-Campos,
  • Carmen García-Redecillas,
  • María Asenjo-Martínez,
  • Joan Carles Trullàs,
  • Begoña Cortés-Rodríguez,
  • Carla de la Guerra-Acebal,
  • Ana Serrado Iglesias,
  • Reyes Aparicio-Santos,
  • Francesc Formiga,
  • Emmanuel Andrès,
  • Oscar Aramburu-Bodas,
  • Prado Salamanca-Bautista,
  • on behalf of EPICTER Study Group

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm11133709
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 13
p. 3709

Abstract

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Introduction: There are studies that evaluate the association between chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) and heart failure (HF) but there is little evidence regarding the prognosis of this comorbidity in older patients admitted for acute HF. In addition, little attention has been given to the extracardiac and extrapulmonary symptoms presented by patients with HF and COPD in more advanced stages. The aim of this study was to evaluate the prognostic impact of COPD on mortality in elderly patients with acute and advanced HF and the clinical manifestations and management from a palliative point of view. Methods: The EPICTER study (“Epidemiological survey of advanced heart failure”) is a cross-sectional, multicenter project that consecutively collected patients admitted for HF in 74 Spanish hospitals. Demographic, clinical, treatment, organ-dependent terminal criteria (NYHA III-IV, LVEF Results: A total of 3100 patients were included of which 812 had COPD. In the COPD group, dyspnea and anxiety were more frequently observed (86.2% vs. 75.3%, p = 0.001 and 35.4% vs. 31.2%, p = 0.043, respectively). In patients with a history of COPD, presentation of HF was in the form of acute pulmonary edema (21% vs. 14.4% in patients without COPD, p = 0.0001). Patients with COPD more frequently suffered from advanced HF (28.9% vs. 19.4%; p p = 0.036). In-hospital and six-month follow-up mortality was 36.5% in patients with COPD vs. 30.7% in patients without COPD, p = 0.005. The mean number of hospital admissions during follow-up was higher in patients with HF and COPD than in those with isolated HF (0.63 ± 0.98 vs. 0.51 ± 0.84; p p = 0.027). Conclusions: patients with HF and COPD had more severe symptoms (dyspnea and anxiety) and also a worse prognosis than patients without COPD. However, the prognosis of patients admitted to our setting is poor and many patients with HF and COPD may not receive the assessment and palliative care support they need. Palliative care is necessary in chronic non-oncologic diseases, especially in multipathologic and symptom-intensive patients. This is a clinical care aspect to be improved and evaluated in future research studies.

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