Clusters of comorbidities based on validated objective measurements and systemic inflammation in patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease

LEGW Vanfleteren, MA Spruit, M Groenen… - American journal of …, 2013 - atsjournals.org
LEGW Vanfleteren, MA Spruit, M Groenen, S Gaffron, VPM van Empel, PLB Bruijnzeel…
American journal of respiratory and critical care medicine, 2013atsjournals.org
Rationale: Comorbidities contribute to disease severity and mortality in patients with chronic
obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD). Comorbidities have been studied individually and
were mostly based on self-reports. The coexistence of objectively identified comorbidities
and the role of low-grade systemic inflammation in the pathophysiology of COPD remain to
be elucidated. Objectives: To cluster 13 clinically important objectively identified
comorbidities, and to characterize the comorbidity clusters in terms of clinical outcomes and …
Rationale: Comorbidities contribute to disease severity and mortality in patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD). Comorbidities have been studied individually and were mostly based on self-reports. The coexistence of objectively identified comorbidities and the role of low-grade systemic inflammation in the pathophysiology of COPD remain to be elucidated.
Objectives: To cluster 13 clinically important objectively identified comorbidities, and to characterize the comorbidity clusters in terms of clinical outcomes and systemic inflammation.
Methods: A total of 213 patients with COPD (FEV1, 51 ± 17% predicted; men, 59%; age, 64 ± 7 yr) were included prospectively. Comorbidities were based on well-known cut-offs identified in the peer-reviewed English literature. Systemic inflammatory biomarkers were determined in all patients. Self-organizing maps were used to generate comorbidity clusters.
Measurements and Main Results: A total of 97.7% of all patients had one or more comorbidities and 53.5% had four or more comorbidities. Five comorbidity clusters were identified: (1) less comorbidity, (2) cardiovascular, (3) cachectic, (4) metabolic, and (5) psychological. Comorbidity clusters differed in health status but were comparable with respect to disease severity. An increased inflammatory state was observed only for tumor necrosis factor (TNF) receptors in the metabolic cluster (geometric mean [lower and upper limit]; TNF-R1, 2,377 [1,850, 3,055] pg/ml, confidence, 98.5%; TNF-R2, 4,080 [3,115, 5,344] pg/ml, confidence, 98.8%) and only for IL-6 in the cardiovascular cluster (IL-6, 3.4 [1.8, 6.6] pg/ml; confidence, 99.8%).
Conclusions: Multimorbidity is common in patients with COPD, and different comorbidity clusters can be identified. Low-grade systemic inflammation is mostly comparable among comorbidity clusters. Increasing knowledge on the interactions between comorbidities increases the understanding of their development and contributes to strategies for prevention or improved treatment.
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