Abstract

There is little published evidence on environmental triggers of COPD exacerbation, despite anecdotal reports from patients and clinicians. This study gathered data on reported triggers of COPD exacerbation among a well-characterized cohort of COPD patients. We hypothesized that patient reports of irritating chemical exposures would differ depending on disease characteristics including asthma co-morbidity and COPD severity. We conducted a cross-sectional survey of 167 clinically-confirmed COPD patients who were participants in a COPD disease management program (DMG) in a large multi-specialty medical group practice. The survey included questions about specific daily activities and associated chemical exposures likely to be irritating to the respiratory system. Participants were asked whether exposure to these activities or products bothered their breathing, whether they avoided them or took additional medications to treat symptoms when exposed to them. More than half of the COPD patients surveyed reported that certain common dusty activities (sweeping, vacuuming, dusting), and exposures to cigarette smoke, wood smoke, vehicle exhaust, cleaning products, perfumes and other scented products (scented candles, insect spray, hair products) adversely affected their breathing. There was evidence that COPD patients with an asthma diagnosis respond more to volatile organic compounds and those with more severe disease were more likely to report being bothered by particulate exposures. Common environmental exposures may adversely affect COPD patients by increasing their use of rescue medications and/or their risk of clinical exacerbation; these exposures may also lower quality of life when patients alter their activities to protect themselves from such exposures.

Highlights

  • There is little published evidence on environmental triggers of Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (COPD) exacerbation, despite anecdotal reports from patients and clinicians

  • The objective of this paper is to summarize the findings of this investigation of self-reported environmental exposures reported by COPD patients to worsen their breathing symptoms

  • Patients are enrolled into the group by pulmonologists or primary care physicians after a diagnosis of COPD is made based on symptoms and spirometry

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Summary

Introduction

There is little published evidence on environmental triggers of COPD exacerbation, despite anecdotal reports from patients and clinicians. We hypothesized that patient reports of irritating chemical exposures would differ depending on disease characteristics including asthma co-morbidity and COPD severity. Tobacco smoking is the primary cause of COPD [2, 3], air pollution and occupational exposures to a number of hazardous chemicals are important preventable causes [4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11]. Environmental tobacco smoke may be a COPD trigger [18] Beyond these three factors, little is known about other preventable triggering exposures

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