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Issue 5, 2007
HOT TOPICS IN RESPIRATORY MEDICINE
Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease: the treatment (Part One)
| Publ. date: | 2007 |
| ISBN: | 978-88-89881-35-4 |
| ISSN: | 1973-9664 |
| E-ISSN: | 2036-0886 |
| DOI: | 10.4147/HTR-070500 |
Abstract
In recent years, the publication of several consensus-type guidelines for COPD in various countries of the world has provided clinicians with solid information on the currently available and standard treatments for COPD. These include the 5 most widely used guidelines: GOLD, NICE, the American Thoracic Society-European Respiratory Society guidelines (ATS-ERS), the Spanish and Latin American guidelines (SEPAR-ALAT), and the Canadian Thoracic Society COPD guidelines. However, it is becoming increasingly clear that it is time for a review of their points of agreement and discrepancies. In the first chapter of this series, Dr. Álvarez Sala and coworkers have summarized this issue together with the most explicit recommendations for each clinical situation and reviewed the current therapeutic challenges in COPD. In addition to pharmacological treatment, the authors emphasize the important role of non-pharmacological approaches such as rehabilitation, long-term oxygen therapy, nutritional advice, home mechanical ventilation and thoracic surgery, including lung transplantation. Dr. N.J. Gross, largely recognized for his research work on anticholinergic therapy, has reviewed the characteristics and clinical efficacy of the latest long-acting bronchodilator, tiotropium bromide. After a short summary on historical and pharmacology-related aspects, the efficacy and safety of tiotropium is reviewed in terms of lung function, rate and severity of exacerbations, and potential side effects and interactions. As well, 2 recently published pharmacoeconomic studies concerning the use of tiotropium are discussed. In the third and last chapter of this issue, one of the most neglected approaches in daily practice in patients with COPD is reviewed, namely pulmonary rehabilitation. Drs. J.R. Jardim and O.A. Nascimento have carried out a good analysis of this interesting and multidisciplinary intervention, with a primary focus on patient selection criteria for rehabilitation programs. They have also detailed the clinical and physiological evaluations that should be performed before and after a rehabilitation program. Finally, they have provided a complete overview of the exercise components of rehabilitation. The authors have placed appropriate emphasis on the key point of the chapter: the necessity of understanding the real benefits of rehabilitation, for both short and long-term quality of life and longevity.
Table of contents
Foreword
The increasing number of patients with COPD throughout the world is strongly associated with the worrisome tobacco smoking trend. Nearly 30% of the global population smokes, and at least 15 to 20 % of these smokers will go on to develop COPD. Currently, the prevalence of COPD ranges from 8 to 20 % in various countries. The burden of this disease has implications not only in terms of economic costs but also for overall quality of life and longevity. To counter the effects of COPD, a considerable number of medical interventions are continually emerging both for the prevention and treatment of COPD.
The current approach to treatment in patients with COPD is simultaneously easy and difficult. On one hand, there are several guidelines that address the most relevant pharmacological and non-pharmacological interventions in a point-by-point fashion. Likewise, it is easy because once the most common etiological factor has been clearly identified, the central recommendation - to stop smoking - can be made. On the other hand, treatment decisions can often be difficult, especially when the respiratory physician has a number of guidelines and recommendations from which to choose.
Two of the most controversial issues in the treatment of these patients are the initiation of inhaled steroids (IS) in the stable patient and the use of antibiotics to manage exacerbations. There are 5 major guidelines for COPD: GOLD, NICE, American Thoracic Society/European Respiratory Society (ATS/ERS), the Spanish and Latin American guidelines (SEPAR/ALAT) and the Canadian Thoracic Society COPD guidelines. All of these agree that IS should be commenced when FEV1 is < 50% of predicted and all the guidelines accept and recommend the use of systemic corticosteroids for exacerbations. However, whereas the GOLD recommendations state that IS should be considered when at least 3 exacerbations per year have been recorded, the ATS/ERS guidelines suggest that IS should already be prescribed when 1 exacerbation/year has occurred. As for antibiotics, clinical criteria prevail as to their use in treating exacerbations. The early use of long-acting anticholinergics such as tiotropium bromide, and the recommendation of pulmonary rehabilitation are topics deserving of more attention.
Treatment of COPD is definitely a hot topic and it is certainly a challenge to become familiar with the different options to follow. In this series, Dr. Álvarez-Sala and coworkers have done an excellent job of revising the available guidelines and presenting the different options in easy-to-read tables, to familiarize the reader with the different guidelines. Furthermore, the authors suggest different ways to modify each guideline if, despite recommendations, the patient’s symptoms persist. Dr. Jardim has carried out a brief and precise revision of pulmonary rehabilitation and Dr. Gross has summarized the effects of tiotropium bromide, including the pharmacological, clinical and functional properties as well as safety and pharmacoeconomic aspects.
ARTICLES
Guidelines for the treatment of COPD
José L. Álvarez-Sala, Myriam Calle Rubio, Javier de Miguel Díez, Juan Luis Rodríguez Hermosa
Tiotropium bromide
Nicholas J. Gross
Pulmonary rehabilitation
José R. Jardim, Oliver A. Nascimento
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Editor-in-chief
Marc Miravitlles - MD
Over the last 15 years there has been a decrease in mortality due to preventable diseases, with the exception of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), which is an example that highlights the r...
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