Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (COPD) is a common lung disease, affecting 1.2 million people in the United Kingdom (UK). COPD patients suffer with episodes of worsening breathing symptoms called acute exacerbations (AECOPD). Exacerbations occur more often as the disease progresses and are a leading cause of emergency hospitalisation. Patients recovering from exacerbations are at high risk of deteriorating, with one quarter readmitted to hospital within thirty days. COPD thus imposes immense burdens on the National Health Service and patients. This research will investigate the effects of using humidified nasal high-flow (HNHF) during recovery from severe COPD exacerbations. HNHF delivers warmed, humidified air under flows of up to 60 litres per minute through a nasal interface. This has been shown to improve clinical outcomes, including exacerbation frequency, hospitalisations, breathlessness and quality of life amongst COPD patients with respiratory failure. It is thought to achieve this by improving secretion clearance and providing positive airways pressure which supports the breathing system. Patients admitted to St Thomas' Hospital, London with COPD exacerbations will be recruited. Prior to discharge, participants will be randomised to receive either usual care alone or usual care plus a HNHF device, which they will be trained to use for a regular period daily. Usual care includes inhalers, steroids and may include antibiotics. Participants will be followed up for 30-days after hospital discharge using weekly assessments, daily symptom diaries and wrist-worn watch-like devices that detect physical activity. This will enable evaluation of the clinical effects of HNHF on re-exacerbations, readmissions, breathlessness, physical activity and quality of life. Device usage will also be quantified. Participants who receive devices will be interviewed to explore their experiences. After the 30-day home follow-up period, a sub-group of participants will undergo detailed breathing tests during and after exercise to explore the effects of HNHF on the respiratory system.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
PREVENTION
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
20
Humidified nasal high-flow device which delivers warmed, humidified air at flow rates of up to 60 litres per minute via a nasal cannula interface. Intended delivery at 30 L/min at 37 degrees Celsius, if tolerated.
Guy's and St Thomas' NHS Foundation Trust
London, United Kingdom
Time to 30-day hospital readmission following index hospitalisation with AECOPD
30-day readmission
Time frame: 30 days following hospital discharge
Recruitment rate of eligible patients
Feasibility outcome measure: assessed by proportion of patients who fulfil eligibility criteria who consent to participate.
Time frame: 30 days following hospital discharge
Adherence with completion of clinical outcome measures (symptom diary)
Feasibility outcome measure: assessed by completion of symptom diaries. Progression criterion = participant diaries completed by \>70% of participants. Assessed at 30-days following hospital discharge.
Time frame: 30 days following hospital discharge
Adherence with completion of clinical outcome measures (physical activity monitor)
Feasibility outcome measure: assessed by usage of physical activity monitors. Progression criterion = usage \>70% of participants. Measured from physical activity monitor computer downloads at 30-days following hospital discharge.
Time frame: 30 days following hospital discharge
Adherence with completion of clinical outcome measures (spirometry)
Feasibility outcome measure: assessed by completion of spirometry. Progression criterion = spirometry measured at every study assessment for \>70% of participants.
Time frame: 30 days following hospital discharge
Participants' HNHF device usage
Feasibility outcome measure: usage hours accessed from the device at completion of participants' study participation for those participants allocated to the intervention arm.
Time frame: 30 days following hospital discharge
Acceptability of HNHF at home: semi-structured interviews
Qualitative evaluation: Use of semi-structured interviews after 30 days post-discharge following index hospitalisation to explore barriers and facilitators to device usage in intervention arm participants.
Time frame: 30 days following hospital discharge
Non-readmission AECOPD
Clinical outcome measure: the number of acute exacerbations of COPD that do not require hospitalisation will be recorded using symptom diaries.
Time frame: 30 days following hospital discharge
Breathlessness
Clinical outcome measure: breathlessness severity will be assessed using the modified Borg scale (minimum score = 0, indicating no breathlessness, maximum score = 10 indicating maximal intensity of breathlessness).
Time frame: 30 days following hospital discharge
Breathlessness
Clinical outcome measure: breathlessness severity will be assessed using the Multidimensional Dyspnoea Profile.
Time frame: 30 days following hospital discharge
Physical activity
Clinical outcome measure: daily physical activity (measured in counts per minute) will be quantified using a wrist-worn physical activity monitor which uses a triaxial accelerometer.
Time frame: 30 days following hospital discharge
Health-related quality of life: COPD Assessment Test
Clinical outcome measure: assessed using the COPD Assessment Test.
Time frame: 30 days following hospital discharge
Health-related quality of life: Clinical COPD Questionnaire
Clinical outcome measure: assessed using the Clinical COPD Questionnaire. Scored from 0 to 60, with higher scores indicative of worse disease-specific health-related quality of life.
Time frame: 30 days following hospital discharge
Inspiratory capacity
Proof of concept study outcome: measured during the physiological sub-study involving incremental exercise using a pneumotachograph.
Time frame: 30 days following hospital discharge
Breathlessness
Proof of concept study outcome: measured during the physiological sub-study involving incremental exercise using the modified Borg scale. This zero to ten scale measures breathlessness intensity, with higher scores representing more intense breathlessness. The score will be measured before exercise, at 2 minute intervals during exercise, at exercise cessation and during exercise recovery.
Time frame: 30 days following hospital discharge
Neural respiratory drive
Proof of concept study outcome: measured during the physiological sub-study involving incremental exercise using a parasternal and diaphragm electromyography using surface and nasogastric electrodes, respectively.
Time frame: 30 days following hospital discharge
Pulmonary pressures and flow
Proof of concept study outcome: measured during the physiological sub-study involving incremental exercise using a pressure transducer connected to a nasogastric catheter and a pneumotachograph.
Time frame: 30 days following hospital discharge
Time to recover from maximal breathlessness
Proof of concept study outcome: time from maximal breathlessness at peak exercise to pre-exercise modified Borg scale.
Time frame: 30 days following hospital discharge
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