Predictors of Survival in Patients with Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease Treated with Long-term Oxygen Therapy

Autor: Skwarski, Krzysztof, MacNee, William, Wraith, Peter K., Sliwinski, Pawel, Zielinski, Jan
Zdroj: Chest; December 1991, Vol. 100 Issue: 6 p1522-1527, 6p
Abstrakt: Long-term oxygen is the only therapy that has been shown to improve survival in patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease. The aim of this study was to assess the predictors of survival in such patients treated with long-term oxygen therapy. We studied 179 patients who were assessed for long-term oxygen therapy in two Departments of Respiratory Medicine: in Warsaw and in Edinburgh. Those who died following the prescription of long-term oxygen therapy had a similar forced expiratory volume in the first second (FEV1) and arterial carbon dioxide tension, but a slightly lower arterial oxygen tensions (p<0.05) than those who survived (p<0.05). A small but significant fall in FEVtand a rise in arterial carbon dioxide tension (p<0.05) occurred in both survivors and nonsurvivors after treatment with oxygen, but arterial oxygen tension breathing air continued to fall only in those who died (p<0.005). Only two variables were independent predictors of survival in patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease treated with long-term oxygen therapy. These were the arterial oxygen tension and the mean pulmonary arterial pressure (Ppa). However, when the calculation was made on patients with PaO2≤60 mm Hg (n = 154), then FEV, and PaO2but not Ppa were found to predict survival.
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