Optimal Management of COPD Patients in the 21st Century
Stephen K. Field, MD, CM, FRCPC, FCCP Clinical Professor of Medicine
Division of Respiratory MedicineUniversity of Calgary and Alberta Health Services
Mackid Symposium 15 April, 2016
Outline of my talk
• Guidelines & where they are heading• Burden of COPD in Canada/Alberta• Unmet needs of COPD patients• Contribution to COPD care by other health professionals• Proposal for CRE support for primary care doctors
Pulmonary rehabilitation Psychological & social care Smoking cessation Nutrition intervention
Oxygen therapy Surgery Vaccination Interdisciplinary teams Patient education Home telehealth
Exercise training improves:◦ Exercise tolerance◦ Muscle deconditioning ◦ Dyspnea◦ Health-related quality of life
Adapted from 1. Casaburi, ZuWallack. N Engl J Med 2009; 2. Reardon et al. Respir Med 2005;3. Porszasz et al. Chest 2005; 4. Riario-Sforza et al. Int J Chron Obstruct Pulmon Dis 2009;
5. Salhi et al. Chest 2010; 6. Garcia-Aymerich et al. Am J Respir Crit Care Med 2007
Update: • Short‐acting bronchodilators: salbutamol, ipratropium, combination• LAAC‐tiotropium, glycopyrronium, umeclidininum, aclidinium• LABA‐salmeterol, formoterol, indacaterol, vilanterol, olodaterol• Dual bronchodilators: Ultibro, Anoro, Duaklir, Inspiolto• Combination: Advair, Symbicort, Zenhale, Breo*• Triple inhalers• Theophylline, roflumilast, azithromycin• Will there be a role for biologics? Anti‐IL‐5, anti‐IL‐13, antineutrophil agents (e.g. CXCR2 antagonists)
*In contradistinction to asthma no role for ICS monotherapy in COPD
COPD in the Calgary Zone2009‐2011 data
• 6,944 ED and UCC visits for AECOPD• 55.6% admitted or transferred• 12.6 hours average length of stay in ER• 10.83 hospital days average (median 6.55 days)• Average cost per admission: $10,000 (2008 data)*
Data provided by AHS Emergency Department
*Chapman KR, Bhutani M, Bourbeau J, Chan CK, Field SK, Flood D, Fitzgerald JM, Grossman R, Hernandez P, Levy R, Marciniuk D, Stickland M, Rea RM. The hospital burden of COPD in Canada. Am J Respir Crit Care Med 2010;181:A1500
UCC‐Urgent Care Centre
Consequences of AECOPD• Accelerated loss of lung function• Poorer health status/QOL• Subsequent AECOPDs are more likelyt
• 4‐14% in‐hospital mortality• 43% dead within 12 months of hospitalization*• 27% mortality among AECOPD discharges#
t Hurst et al Susceptibility to exacerbation in Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease. NEJM 2010;363:1128‐38*Connors AF Jr, Dawson NV, Thomas C, et al. Outcomes following acute exacerbation of severe chronic obstructivepulmonary disease. Am J Respir Crit Care Med 1996;154(4Pt1):959‐67#Nie JX, Wang L, Upshur REG. Mortality of elderly patients in Ontario after hospital admissionfor chronic obstructive pulmonary disease. Can Respir J 2009;14(8):485‐9
Mortality Increases with Frequency of AECOPD
Soler‐Cataluña JJ, et al.: Thorax 2005; 60(11):925‐31.
Time (months)0
Prob
ability of surviving 0 AEs
1‐2 AEs
>3 AEs
0.010 20 30 40 50 60
0.2
0.4
0.6
0.8
1.0
p<0.0001
p=0.069
p<0.0002
‘Frequent flyers’• In 2011, 400/1806 COPD patients attended ER more than once, up to 10 times/yr*
• Why? Limited access to outpatient care• Many still don’t have a primary care physician• Medicentres: care model often not conducive to ideal management
• unfamiliar with patients• rapid throughput
* Data provided by AHS Emergency Department
COPD pathway
• Often confusing for patients & families• After consultation, patients are usually discharged from specialist care with:
• new prescriptions, often unfamiliar delivery devices • instructions to stop smoking & immunization • encouraged to participate in a rehab/exercise program• although recommendations are appropriate, often not followed, or only partially followed, to the detriment of patient care
COPD patient pathway through the system• Consultation experience is stressful for patients & family members• Instructions are misunderstood or forgotten • often inadequate time during consultation to insure that patients are properly instructed to use their new inhaler device(s) correctly
• limited access to family doctors contributes to poor adherence to specialists’ recommendations
• Poorly controlled COPD patients are a significant burden on both out‐ & inpatient resources within Alberta Health Services
Canada• One of the lowest MD/Population in OECD*• Access to medical services/wait times are an increasing challenge• Health care costs are increasing faster than GDP• Increasing demand for other health care professionals to provide medical care
*OECD‐Organization for Economic Cooperation & Development
Canadian experience with COPD care by non‐MD health care workers
• Patients previously hospitalized with AECOPD• Case manager/contact• ‘Directed’ self‐management• Education about COPD• lifestyle counseling‐diet, smoking cessation• Action plan
Bourbeau J, et al. McGill University group Arch Intern Med 2003
Gadoury M-A, et al. Eur Respir J 2005;26(5):853-7.
-42.6% reduction
-26.9% reduction1.65
0.95
1.21
1.65
0
0.5
1
1.5
Hos
pita
lizat
ions
/pat
ient
-yea
r Standard care
Self-management
Year 1 Year 2
Self‐Management Education: Reduces Hospitalization
Self‐Management Education: Substantial Cost Savings
Bourbeau J, et al. Chest 2006;130:1704-11.
Standard care
Self-management
$8,000
$6,000
$4,000
$2,000
Cos
t per
pat
ient
($)
$6,674
$5,177
$6,674
$4,525
$6,674
$4,246
p=0.16 p=0.046 p=0.024
Caseload (number of patients)30 50 70
JGH group: benefits of a nurse navigator
•Reduced respiratory ER visits*•Decreased respiratory hospitalizations*•Reduced total hospital days*•Decreased hospitalizations for AECOPD*•Reduced hospital days for AECOPD*• Savings >$260,000
* p<0.05
Dajczman E et al. Can Respir J 2013;20(5):351‐6
Rocker G et al QEII hospital Halifax Chest 2013 DOI:10.1378/Chest 1703858
• Multidisciplinary team, 3 FTE• After hospital, F/U Q2wk X 2/12, Q1/12 X 3/12• Hospital & home‐based support• Disease education, focus on patient & family • Written action plan for self‐care of AECOPD• Written action plan for dyspnea crises• Advance Care planning
Rocker G et al QEII Halifax Chest 2013 DOI:10.1378/Chest 1703858
•6 months pre vs 6 months post: n=89• ER visits 173‐>66 (62% reduction)•Hospitalizations 107‐>37 (68% reduction)•Hospital bed days 1129‐>382 (66% reduction)•$749,000 savings (3 times cost of program)•No improvement in QOL (CRQ)
Not all self‐management programs work• Unless patients follow instructions, they will not benefit
• Fan VS et al Ann Intern Med 2012, VA study no benefit but intervention group did not receive antibiotics or prednisone earlier than control group
• Bucknall et al BMJ 2012 no benefit vs control group BUT patients who adhered to instructions DID benefit
• Programs can work• Need good ‘learners’ and need good ‘educators’, CREs would provide ‘good’ education
Certified Respiratory Educators (CRE)• Rigorously trained to educate & help manage asthma, COPD, & to counsel smoking cessation
• And chronic cough*
* CCAP group Can Respir J 2009, Chest 2009
Challenges in COPD management (potential roles for CREs)
• Patient education: pathophysiology & rationale for treatments &• Smoking cessation• Vaccination• Adherence• Proper inhaler technique • initial instruction• remediation• Action plan
ODonnell DE, et al. Can Respir J 2008;15(Suppl A):1A‐8A
Patient Education Program• Smoking cessation
• Basic Education (pathophysiology & rationale for treatments)
• Effective inhaler technique
• Self‐management with case manager participation
• Early recognition and treatment of AECOPD
• Strategies to alleviate dyspnea
• Advanced directives and/or end‐of‐life issues
CREs provide smoking cessation counseling• Stress of COPD‐social & financial consequences create conditions that make smoking cessation less likely & increase likelihood of relapse
• 52% who achieve smoking abstinence relapse at least once
• Although controversial, counseling & support are felt to be important for relapse prevention
• If smokers aren’t encouraged to quit repeatedly, success rate for permanent smoking cessation is <5%
Nakajima M. Predictors of Risk for Smoking Relapse in Men & Women: A Prospective Examination. Psychol Addict Behav2012 Feb 20. [Epub]Carson KV. Training health professionals in smoking cessation. Cochrane Database Syst Review 2012Kerr DC. The timing of smoking onset, prolonged abstinence and relapse in men: a prospective study from ages 18 to 32 years. Addiction 2011 Nov;106(11):2031‐8.
CREs can encourage vaccination• Both influenza & pneumococcal vaccination are recommended for COPD patients
• In Alberta, only 41% of eligible are vaccinated1
1. www.cbc.ca/news/health/story/2012/05/10/bc‐flu‐vaccine‐report.html
0%10%20%30%40%50%60%70%80%90%
100%N
ew P
atie
nts
0-15
Day
s
16-3
0 D
ays
31-6
0 D
ays
61-9
0 D
ays
91-1
20 D
ays
121-
150
Day
s
151-
180
Day
s
181-
210
Day
s
211-
240
Day
s
241-
270
Day
s
271-
300
Day
s
301-
330
Day
s
331-
365
Day
s
Salmeterol/fluticasone Budesonide/formoterolFluticasone Budesonide
Poor adherence to maintenance therapy
Adapted from Brogan National Private Payer data. April 2007‐March 2008.
After 3 months, over 50% of patients stopped maintenance therapy.After a year, adherence decreased to below 30%.
Patie
nt re
tention rate
26
Adherence
• Regular follow up by CREs, either by phone or face‐to‐face could reinforce adherence
• Use of spacer to reduce throat irritation &/or optimize bronchial deposition of medication
• Recommend change of delivery device to optimize adherence/preference/benefit (if required)
Inhaler technique
• Many COPD patients don’t use inhalers correctly• Unless inhalers are used properly, patients don’t benefit & may suffer the same adverse health outcomes as non‐adherent patients
• Proper inhaler use is a multistep process & improper technique at any point jeopardizes medication delivery & subsequent clinical outcomes
• Even patients instructed in proper inhaler use experience deterioration in quality of their technique over time & benefit from periodic remedial instruction
• CREs can provide the necessary initial instruction & remediation
Crompton GK, et al. The need to improve inhalation technique in Europe:a report from the aerosol drug management improvement team.Respir Med 2006;100:1479‐94
Bosnic‐Anticevich SZ, et al. Metered‐dose inhaler technique: the effect of two educational interventions delivered in community pharmacy over time. J Asthma 2010;47:251‐6
Inhaler technique instruction & remediation
Unrealistic to expect that primary care doctors (or specialists) can instruct patients to properly use of all of these types of inhalers.
CREs are the obvious health care professionals to instruct patients how to use the different inhalers.
Action plan• Canadian studies:• At onset of an exacerbation, treat with oral prednisone +/‐ antibiotic• Prednisone reduces relapses1
• Antibiotics improve outcomes with ‘infectious’ exacerbations2
• Early intervention & treatment escalation, should reduce ER visits & hospitalizations
1. Aaron SD, et al New Engl J Med 20032. Anthonisen N, et al Ann Intern Med 1987
Proposal for a CRE‐managed clinic for patients with a history of exacerbations
At periodic assessments:• Patients will be questioned about:• Smoking status• Medical encounters since last visit• Symptom control• Acute exacerbations• Adherence to specialist recommendations
Periodic management will consist of:• Smoking cessation counseling (if needed)• Medication adherence review• Inhaler technique review/instruction• +/‐ influenza/pneumococcal vaccination• Reinforcement of action plan instructions• Early intervention with AECOPD• Provide resource when patient is unwell• Involve specialist when needed to modify treatment
Summary• COPD remains a major health burden in Canada• AECOPDs adversely effect QOL
• accelerate lung function decline • predict further AECOPDs • represent a significant financial burden, both direct & indirect costs.
• Are significant contributors to mortality
• A CRE‐managed clinic should improve outcomes