Characterizing COPD Symptom Variability in the Stable State Utilizing the Evaluating Respiratory Symptoms in COPD Instrument. Academic Article uri icon

Overview

abstract

  • RATIONALE: It has been suggested that patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) experience considerable daily respiratory symptom fluctuation. A standardized measure is needed to quantify and understand the implications of day-to-day symptom variability. OBJECTIVES: To compare standard deviation with other statistical measures of symptom variability and identify characteristics of individuals with higher symptom variability. METHODS: Individuals in the SubPopulations and InteRmediate Outcome Measures In COPD Study (SPIROMICS) Exacerbations sub-study completed an Evaluating Respiratory Symptoms in COPD (E-RS) daily questionnaire. We calculated within-subject standard deviation (WS-SD) for each patient at week 0 and correlated this with measurements obtained 4 weeks later using Pearson's r and Bland Altman plots. Median WS-SD value dichotomized participants into higher versus lower variability groups. Association between WS-SD and exacerbation risk during 4 follow-up weeks was explored. MEASUREMENTS AND MAIN RESULTS: Diary completion rates were sufficient in 140 (68%) of 205 sub-study participants. Reproducibility (r) of the WS-SD metric from baseline to week 4 was 0.32. Higher variability participants had higher St George's Respiratory Questionnaire (SGRQ) scores (47.3 ± 20.3 versus 39.6 ± 21.5, p=.04) than lower variability participants. Exploratory analyses found no relationship between symptom variability and health care resource utilization-defined exacerbations. CONCLUSIONS: WS-SD of the E-RS can be used as a measure of symptom variability in studies of patients with COPD. Patients with higher variability have worse health-related quality of life. WS-SD should be further validated as a measure to understand the implications of symptom variability.

authors

  • Krishnan, Jamuna
  • Ancy, Kayley M
  • Oromendia, Clara
  • Hoffman, Katherine L
  • Easthausen, Imaani
  • Leidy, Nancy K
  • Han, MeiLan K
  • Bowler, Russell P
  • Christenson, Stephanie A
  • Couper, David J
  • Criner, Gerard J
  • Curtis, Jeffrey L
  • Dransfield, Mark T
  • Hansel, Nadia N
  • Iyer, Anand S
  • Paine Iii, Robert
  • Peters, Stephen P
  • Wedzicha, Jadwiga A
  • Woodruff, Prescott G
  • Ballman, Karla
  • Martinez, Fernando J

publication date

  • April 29, 2022

Identity

PubMed Central ID

  • PMC9166327

Scopus Document Identifier

  • 85130906376

Digital Object Identifier (DOI)

  • 10.15326/jcopdf.2021.0263

PubMed ID

  • 35403414

Additional Document Info

volume

  • 9

issue

  • 2