Journal Information
Vol. 60. Issue 6.
Pages 356-363 (June 2024)
Share
Share
Download PDF
More article options
Vol. 60. Issue 6.
Pages 356-363 (June 2024)
Original Article
Clinical Characteristics and Outcomes of the Phenotypes of COPD-Bronchiectasis Association
Visits
672
Cui-xia Pana,1, Zhen-feng Hea,1, Sheng-zhu Lina,1, Jun-qing Yuea,1, Zhao-ming Chena,1, Wei-jie Guana,b,
Corresponding author
battery203@163.com

Corresponding author.
a State Key Laboratory of Respiratory Disease, National Clinical Research Center for Respiratory Disease, National Center for Respiratory Medicine, Department of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine, Guangzhou Institute of Respiratory Health, The First Affiliated Hospital of Guangzhou Medical University, Guangzhou, Guangdong, China
b Guangzhou National Laboratory, Guangzhou, Guangdong, China
This item has received
Article information
Abstract
Full Text
Bibliography
Download PDF
Statistics
Figures (5)
Show moreShow less
Tables (2)
Table 1. Demographic characteristics, medication, laboratory tests, hospitalization outcomes of patients with CBA, COPD, and bronchiectasis in the training set.
Table 2. Demographic and clinical characteristics of five clusters of inpatients with CBA in the training set.
Show moreShow less
Additional material (1)
Abstract
Introduction

Although COPD may frequently co-exist with bronchiectasis [COPD-bronchiectasis associated (CBA)], little is known regarding the clinical heterogeneity. We aimed to identify the phenotypes and compare the clinical characteristics and prognosis of CBA.

Methods

We conducted a retrospective cohort study involving 2928 bronchiectasis patients, 5158 COPD patients, and 1219 patients with CBA hospitalized between July 2017 and December 2020. We phenotyped CBA with a two-step clustering approach and validated in an independent retrospective cohort with decision-tree algorithms.

Results

Compared with patients with COPD or bronchiectasis alone, patients with CBA had significantly longer disease duration, greater lung function impairment, and increased use of intravenous antibiotics during hospitalization. We identified five clusters of CBA. Cluster 1 (N=120, CBA-MS) had predominantly moderate–severe bronchiectasis, Cluster 2 (N=108, CBA-FH) was characterized by frequent hospitalization within the previous year, Cluster 3 (N=163, CBA-BI) had bacterial infection, Cluster 4 (N=143, CBA-NB) had infrequent hospitalization but no bacterial infection, and Cluster 5 (N=113, CBA-NHB) had no hospitalization or bacterial infection in the past year. The decision-tree model predicted the cluster assignment in the validation cohort with 91.8% accuracy. CBA-MS, CBA-BI, and CBA-FH exhibited higher risks of hospital re-admission and intensive care unit admission compared with CBA-NHB during follow-up (all P<0.05). Of the five clusters, CBA-FH conferred the worst clinical prognosis.

Conclusion

Bronchiectasis severity, recent hospitalizations and sputum culture findings are three defining variables accounting for most heterogeneity of CBA, the characterization of which will help refine personalized clinical management.

Keywords:
Bronchiectasis
COPD
Clinical characteristics
Two-step clustering
Abbreviations:
COPD
CBA
CBA-MS
CBA-FH
CBA-BI
CBA-NB
CBA-NHB
FVC% pred
FEV1% pred
ICU
CCI
BSI
HRCT

Article

These are the options to access the full texts of the publication Archivos de Bronconeumología
Member
If you are a member of SEPAR:
  • Go to >>>SEPAR<<< website and sign in.
Subscriber
Subscriber

If you already have your login data, please click here .

If you have forgotten your password you can you can recover it by clicking here and selecting the option “I have forgotten my password”
Subscribe
Subscribe to

Archivos de Bronconeumología

Purchase
Purchase article

Purchasing article the PDF version will be downloaded

Price 19.34 €

Purchase now
Contact
Phone for subscriptions and reporting of errors
From Monday to Friday from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. (GMT + 1) except for the months of July and August which will be from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m.
Calls from Spain
932 415 960
Calls from outside Spain
+34 932 415 960
Email
Archivos de Bronconeumología
Article options
Tools

Are you a health professional able to prescribe or dispense drugs?