Abstract

Background and aimWhether long-term oxygen therapy (LTOT) improves survival in interstitial lung disease (ILD) is unclear. A recent study reported similar survival in ILD patients with severe hypoxemia on LTOT vs. moderate hypoxemia without LTOT, and proposed that LTOT could be indicated in ILD already at moderate hypoxemia. The aim of this study was to compare survival by severity of hypoxemia in patients with ILD and COPD, respectively, treated with LTOT. MethodsA population-based, longitudinal study of adults starting LTOT for ILD or COPD 1987–2018. Transplant-free survival was compared between moderate (PaO2 7.4–8.7 kPa) and severe (PaO2<7.4 kPa) hypoxemia using Cox regression, adjusted for age, sex, BMI, smoking status, WHO performance status, year of starting LTOT, diagnosis of heart failure, ischemic heart disease and diabetes mellitus. ResultsIn total, 17,084 patients were included, with ILD and moderate (n = 470) or severe hypoxemia (n = 2,408), and COPD with moderate (n = 2,087) or severe hypoxemia (n = 12,119). Compared with in COPD, ILD patients on LTOT had lower transplant-free survival after one year (41.9 vs. 67.1%) and two years (20.3 vs. 46.5%). In COPD worse hypoxemia was associated with slightly increased risk of death/lung transplantation, aHR 1.07 (1.00–1.14), a difference not shown in ILD, aHR 0.91 (0.80–1.03). ConclusionTransplant-free survival did not differ in ILD patients between moderate and severe hypoxia despite LTOT.

Highlights

  • Long-term oxygen therapy (LTOT) improves survival of patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) and severe resting hyp­ oxemia, but its effect in moderate hypoxemia and in other conditions such as interstitial lung disease (ILD) is unclear [1]

  • The authors hypothesized that long-term oxygen therapy (LTOT) might be indicated earlier in ILD than COPD - already in moderate hypoxemia to improve the outcomes in ILD

  • This hypothesis would be supported by observing improved survival in ILD patients with moderate hypoxemia compared with severe hypoxemia when receiving LTOT, but no such data has been available as yet

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Summary

Introduction

Long-term oxygen therapy (LTOT) improves survival of patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) and severe resting hyp­ oxemia, but its effect in moderate hypoxemia and in other conditions such as interstitial lung disease (ILD) is unclear [1]. A key finding was that ILD patients with moderate hypoxemia (PaO2 7.4–8.0 kPa without or 8.0–8.7 mmHg with hypoxic organ damage) not treated with LTOT had similar mortality as patients with severe hypoxemia (PaO2

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