Abstract

BackgroundEosinophils are thought to be associated with the frequency and severity of acute exacerbations of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (AECOPD); however, the role of eosinophilic inflammation in AECOPD is still incompletely understood. ObjectivesTo investigate the relationship between different levels of blood eosinophils and clinical features, including comorbidities, therapy, and prognosis, and to further explore the optimal eosinophilic cutoff. MethodsWe retrospectively collected and analyzed medical data, laboratory findings, chest CT images, treatment, and three-year follow-up data from 984 AECOPD patients with different blood eosinophil (EOS) levels: EOS%<2%, ≥2%; EOS%<3%, ≥3%; eosinophil counts<100 cells/L, ≥100 cells/L. ResultsThe prevalence of eosinophilia was 36.48% of EOS≥2% (359 cases), 22.87% of EOS≥3% (225 cases), and 48.48% with eosinophil counts≥100 cells/µl (477 cases). EOS was associated with comorbidities, including pulmonary heart disease, arrhythmia (atrial fibrillation), laboratory testing and clinical treatment, including respiratory failure, airway limitation, infectious inflammation, rate of antibiotic use, systemic glucocorticoids, and three mortality rates. The ROC curve showed that the indicators of AUC≥0.5 included chest CT imaging (emphysema 1.8% or ≥100/µl, bronchitis, 1.7% or ≥100/µl), osteoporosis (2.4% or ≥140/µl), mental illness 6.1% (or ≥400/µl), dust exposure (2.2% or ≥240/µl) and ex-smoker (1.3% or ≥100/µl). ConclusionsThe relatively higher EOS group (≥2% or ≥100/µl) was associated with fewer complications, mild airflow limitation, a tendency of noninfectious inflammation, and lower 3-year mortality. Eosinophils can not only guide clinical treatment but also be an indicator of predicting clinical outcome and prognosis in AECOPD patients.

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