A Randomized Trial of Long-Term Oxygen for COPD with Moderate Desaturation
The Long-Term Oxygen Treatment Trial Research Group*
N Engl J Med. 2016 October 27; 375(17): 1617–1627
Kolkata Call Girls Services 9907093804 @24x7 High Class Babes Here Call Now
Oxygen Therapy is not Beneficial in COPD Patients with Moderate Hypoxaemia
1.
2. Oxygen Therapy is not
Beneficial in COPD Patients
with moderate Hypoxaemia
Gamal Agmy ,MD, FCCP
Professor of Chest Diseases, Assiut University
3. Long-term treatment with supplemental
oxygen has unknown efficacy in patients
with stable chronic obstructive pulmonary
disease (COPD) and resting or exercise-
induced moderate desaturation.
4. A Randomized Trial of Long-Term
Oxygen for COPD with Moderate
Desaturation
The Long-Term Oxygen Treatment
Trial Research Group*
N Engl J Med. 2016 October 27;
375(17): 1617–1627
5. Moderate resting desaturation
(SpO2, 89 to 93%) or moderate
exercise-induced desaturation
(during the 6-minute walk test,
SpO2 ≥80% for ≥5 minutes and
<90% for ≥10 seconds).
6. A total of 14 regional clinical centers and their
associated sites (a total of 47 centers)
screened patients who had stable COPD and
moderate resting desaturation (SpO2, 89 to
93%) or moderate exercise-induced
desaturation (during the 6-minute walk test,
SpO2 ≥80% for ≥5 minutes and <90% for ≥10
seconds). All the patients signed a contract in
which they agreed not to smoke while using
oxygen, and they provided written informed
consent.
.
7. Patients in the supplemental-oxygen group were
prescribed 24-hour oxygen if their resting SpO2 was 89 to
93% and oxygen only during sleep and exercise if they
had desaturation only during exercise. All the patients in
the supplemental-oxygen group were prescribed
stationary and portable oxygen systems and 2 liters of
oxygen per minute during sleep. Patients in the
supplemental-oxygen group who had been prescribed 24-
hour oxygen were prescribed 2 liters of oxygen per
minute at rest. The ambulatory dose of oxygen was
individually prescribed and reassessed annually: 2 liters
of oxygen per minute or adjusted higher to maintain an
SpO2 of 90% or more for at least 2 minutes while the
patient was walking.
8. Patients in the no-supplemental-
oxygen group avoid the use of
supplemental oxygen unless severe
resting desaturation (SpO2 ≤88%) or
severe exercise-induced desaturation
(SpO2 <80% for ≥1 minute) developed.
If either of these conditions
developed, oxygen was prescribed
and the oxygen requirement was
reassessed after 30 days.
9. The groups were balanced for oxygen-
desaturation type: 60 (16%) and 73
(20%) had oxygen desaturation only at
rest, 171 (46%) and 148 (40%) had
oxygen desaturation only upon
exercise, and 139 (38%) and 147 (40%)
had oxygen desaturation at rest and
upon exercise. Patients were followed
for 1 to 6 years.
10. Supplemental oxygen, regardless of
prescription type or adherence, failed to
benefit patients overall or any subgroup of
patients with stable COPD and moderate
desaturation. The results were similar for all
groups based on measures of time to death
or first hospitalization (hazard ratio, 0.94;
95% confidence interval [CI], 0.79 to
1.12; P = .52).
11. Hospitalization for a COPD-related
hospitalizations (rate ratio, 0.99; 95% CI,
0.83 to 1.17), non–COPD-related
hospitalizations (rate ratio, 1.03; 95% CI,
0.90 to 1.18), the rate of all hospitalizations
(rate ratio, 1.01; 95% CI, 0.91 to 1.13), and
the rate of all COPD exacerbations (rate
ratio, 1.08; 95% CI, 0.98 to 1.19) were similar.
12. Additionally, patients who did and did not
receive oxygen treatment did not differ
based on changes on measures of quality
of life, depression, anxiety, or functional
status.
13. Oxygen treatment also was not without
risk. Among the 51 adverse events
attributed to the use of supplemental
oxygen were 23 reports of tripping over
equipment, including two cases that
necessitated hospitalization. There were
five patients who reported six cases of
fires or burns, including one who had to be
hospitalized.
14. The researchers acknowledged that some
patients may not have enrolled in the trial
because they were too ill or felt that
oxygen was beneficial. “Highly
symptomatic patients who declined
enrollment might have had a different
response to oxygen than what we
observed in the enrolled patients,” they
noted.
15. Uniform devices weren’t used for
oxygen delivery, so the amount of
oxygen delivered may have varied,
and the study did not evaluate the
immediate effects of oxygen on
symptoms or exercise performance.
Nocturnal oxygen saturation was not
measured, and “some patients with
COPD and severe nocturnal
desaturation might benefit from
nocturnal oxygen supplementation,”
16. “Patients’ self-reported adherence may
have been an overestimate of their
actual oxygen use,” they added,
noting, however, that there was good
agreement with use “as measured by
means of serial meter readings on the
concentrator.”
17. The consistency of the null findings
strengthens the overall conclusion
that long-term supplemental oxygen in
patients with stable COPD and resting
or exercise-induced moderate
desaturation has no benefit with
regard to the multiple outcomes
measured.”
Conclusion