Abstract

BackgroundFew studies have investigated the 24-hour symptom profile in patients with COPD or how symptoms during the 24-hour day are inter-related. This observational study assessed the prevalence, severity and relationship between night-time, early morning and daytime COPD symptoms and explored the relationship between 24-hour symptoms and other patient-reported outcomes.MethodsThe study enrolled patients with stable COPD in clinical practice. Baseline night-time, early morning and daytime symptoms (symptom questionnaire), severity of airflow obstruction (FEV1), dyspnoea (modified Medical Research Council Dyspnoea Scale), health status (COPD Assessment Test), anxiety and depression levels (Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale), sleep quality (COPD and Asthma Sleep Impact Scale) and physical activity level (sedentary, moderately active or active) were recorded.ResultsThe full analysis set included 727 patients: 65.8% male, mean ± standard deviation age 67.2 ± 8.8 years, % predicted FEV1 52.8 ± 20.5%.In each part of the 24-hour day, >60% of patients reported experiencing ≥1 symptom in the week before baseline. Symptoms were more common in the early morning and daytime versus night-time (81.4%, 82.7% and 63.0%, respectively). Symptom severity was comparable for each period assessed. Overall, in the week before baseline, 56.7% of patients had symptoms throughout the whole 24-hour day (3 parts of the day); 79.9% had symptoms in ≥2 parts of the 24-hour day. Symptoms during each part of the day were inter-related, irrespective of disease severity (all p < 0.001).Early morning and daytime symptoms were associated with the severity of airflow obstruction (p < 0.05 for both). Night-time, early morning and daytime symptoms were all associated with worse dyspnoea, health status and sleep quality, and higher anxiety and depression levels (all p < 0.001 versus patients without symptoms in each corresponding period). In each part of the 24-hour day, there was also an association between symptoms and a patient’s physical activity level (p < 0.05 for each period).ConclusionsMore than half of patients experienced COPD symptoms throughout the whole 24-hour day. There was a significant relationship between night-time, early morning and daytime symptoms. In each period, symptoms were associated with worse patient-reported outcomes, suggesting that improving 24-hour symptoms should be an important consideration in the management of COPD.Electronic supplementary materialThe online version of this article (doi:10.1186/s12931-014-0122-1) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.

Highlights

  • Few studies have investigated the 24-hour symptom profile in patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) or how symptoms during the 24-hour day are inter-related

  • There was a significant relationship between night-time, early morning and daytime symptoms

  • Symptoms were associated with worse patient-reported outcomes, suggesting that improving 24-hour symptoms should be an important consideration in the management of COPD

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Summary

Introduction

Few studies have investigated the 24-hour symptom profile in patients with COPD or how symptoms during the 24-hour day are inter-related This observational study assessed the prevalence, severity and relationship between night-time, early morning and daytime COPD symptoms and explored the relationship between 24-hour symptoms and other patient-reported outcomes. The characteristic symptoms of COPD include breathlessness, cough and increased sputum production and, based on cohort studies, there is extensive evidence that COPD symptoms have a considerable impact on patients’ daily activities, health status and quality of life [4,5,6,7,8]. Morning symptoms impact on patients’ normal activities [8,10,12,13] and have been demonstrated to be associated with worse health status and a higher risk of COPD exacerbations [8,13]. With regard to night-time symptoms, a recent real-world study demonstrated that patients with night-time symptoms had significantly worse health status, more sleep disturbances and higher healthcare resource utilisation than patients without nighttime symptoms [7]

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