This will be a non-blinded feasibility (pilot) study comparing triple therapy nebulizer vs dry powdered inhalers (DPI) for care transitions in Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) exacerbation patients. We hypothesize that patients treated in hospital and discharged on respiratory medications administered by nebulizers will exhibit better quality of life (QoL), symptom control, and lower COPD and all cause hospital readmission rates compared with patients treated with respiratory medications delivered by DPI. We aim to demonstrate that: 1. Patients treated and discharged on nebulized bronchodilators will have fewer readmissions to hospital at 30 and 90 days compared to the group utilizing DPI 2. The nebulizer group will demonstrate a longer duration of time until hospital readmission for COPD and all cause readmission compared to the group utilizing DPI 3. The nebulizer group will demonstrate better QoL (measured by the SGRQ - Saint George Respiratory Questionnaire) and symptom control (as measured by the CAT \& mMRC) compared to the group utilizing DPI.
Drugs used to treat Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) are available primarily in hand held inhaler devices that deliver dry powder (DPI), a soft mist or a metered dose of spray (MDI). The frail, arthritic elderly are often prescribed DPI rather than MDI or soft mist devices, because they require less coordination. DPIs however require the ability to inhale against a resistance with a peak inspiratory force (PIF) more negative than 60 L/min to break the dry powder into respirable particles. Preliminary data suggests that suboptimal PIF's are common during an acute exacerbation of COPD, affecting 48% of hospitalized patients, thus placing them at risk for treatment failure and possibly hospital readmission. Use of nebulizers to administer respiratory medications may avoid the hazards of insufficient dosing that can result from use of DPI however they are cumbersome, expensive and the variety of drugs available in a nebulizer format is limited. We hypothesize that patients treated in hospital and is charged on respiratory medications administered by nebulizers will exhibit better symptom control and lower COPD and all cause hospital readmission rates compared with patients treated with respiratory medications delivered by DPI. We aim to demonstrate that 1) patients treated and discharged on nebulized bronchodilators will have fewer readmissions to hospital at 30 and 90 days compared to the group utilizing DPI 2) that the nebulizer group will demonstrate a longer duration of time till hospital readmission for COPD and all cause readmission compared to the group utilizing DPI and 3) the nebulizer group will demonstrate better symptom control compared to the group utilizing DPI. This nonblinded feasibility (pilot) study will enroll 100 patients hospitalized for an exacerbation of COPD who are \> 40 years of age, have a clinical diagnosis of COPD. The study will consist of 3 outpatient visits (Transitional Care Visit \[314 days after discharge\], Visit #2 \[30 +/5 days after discharge\], and Visit #3 \[90 +/5 days after discharge\]). Visit #2 and #3 are for study purposes, the Transitional Care Visit is standard of care. We hypothesize and aim to demonstrate that patients treated in hospital and discharged on respiratory medications administered by nebulizers will exhibit better quality of life (QoL), symptom control and lower COPD and all cause hospital readmission rates compared with patients treated with respiratory medications delivered by DPI.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
40
Patients treated and discharged on nebulized bronchodilators
Patients treated and discharged on Dry Powder Inhalers
Subjects will receive a long-acting B2-agonist(LABA; Brovana, twice daily)
Subjects will receive a corticosteroid (ICS; Pulmicort, twice daily)
Subjects will receive a short-acting anti-cholinergic (SAMA; Atrovent, three times a day)
Subjects will receive a LABA/ICS (Advair Diskus, twice daily)
Subjects will receive a long-acting anticholinergic (LAMA-Spiriva Handihaler, once daily)
Wake Forest Baptist Health
Winston-Salem, North Carolina, United States
Quality of Life Measured by St. George's Respiratory Questionnaire (SGRQ)
Scores range from 0 to 100, with higher scores indicating more limitations - Symptoms component (frequency \& severity) with a 1, 3 or 12-month recall (best performance with 3- and 12-month recall); Part 2: Activities that cause or are limited by breathlessness; Impact components (social functioning, psychological disturbances resulting from airways disease) refer to current state as the recall
Time frame: 90 Days
Symptom Control Measured by the COPD Assessment Test (CAT)
The COPD Assessment Test (CAT) is a patient-completed instrument that can quantify the impact of COPD on the patient's health. The CAT is a validated, short (8-item) and simple patient completed questionnaire. The CAT has a scoring range of 0-40 and a difference or change of 2 or more units over 2 to 3 months in a patient suggests a clinically significant difference or change in health status. A score of \>30 indicates that COPD has a very high impact on daily life, a score of \>20 indicates a high impact, 10-20 is medium impact, \<10 is low impact, and 5 is the upper limit for healthy non-smokers. A higher score would represent a poor outcome for this test.
Time frame: 90 Days
Symptom Control Measured by The Modified Medical Research Council Dyspnea Scale (mMRC)
The Modified Medical Research Council Dyspnea Scale, or MMRC, uses a simple grading system to assess a patient's level of dyspnea -- shortness of breath. The scale goes from 0-4 with a 0 = I only get breathless with strenuous exercise, 1 = I get short of breath when hurrying on level ground or walking up a slight hill, 2 = On level ground, I walk slower than people of the same age because of breathlessness or have to stop for breath when walking at my own pace, 3 = I stop for breath after walking about 100 yards or after a few minutes on level ground, and 4 = I am too breathless to leave the house or I am breathless when dressing. 4 would represent the worst outcome.
Time frame: 90 Days
COPD and All-Cause Hospital Readmissions After 30 Days
Compare the number of hospital readmissions between the two arms after 30 days of using each device.
Time frame: 30 Days
COPD and All-Cause Hospital Readmissions After 90 Days
Compare the number of hospital readmissions between the two arms after 90 days of using each device.
Time frame: 90 Days
Unscheduled Clinic or ER Visits
Compare the number of unscheduled clinic or ER visits between the two arms after 90 days of using each device
Time frame: 90 Days
Change in Pulmonary Inspiratory Force (PIF) From Baseline at 90 Days - R -2 (Low to Medium Resistance Inhalers)
Pulmonary inspiratory force (PIF) from hospital baseline between the two arms for the duration of the 90 day study.
Time frame: Baseline and 90 days
Number of Deaths
Time frame: 90 days
Change in Pulmonary Inspiratory Force (PIF) From Baseline at 90 Days - R -5 (High Resistance Inhalers)
Pulmonary inspiratory force (PIF) from hospital baseline between the two arms for the duration of the 90 day study.
Time frame: Baseline and 90 days
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