1. Feasibility and Outcomes of a Standardized Management Protocol for Acute Exacerbation of Interstitial Lung Disease
- Author
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Adams, Colin J., Chohan, Karan, Rozenberg, Dmitry, Kavanagh, John, Greyling, Gerhard, Shapera, Shane, and Fisher, Jolene H.
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Medical research -- Health aspects ,Medicine, Experimental -- Health aspects ,Corticosteroids -- Health aspects ,Lung diseases -- Health aspects ,Mortality -- Canada ,CT imaging -- Health aspects ,Diagnostic imaging -- Health aspects ,Company business management ,Health - Abstract
Background and Objective Despite the high mortality of acute exacerbations of interstitial lung disease (AE-ILD), there is minimal evidence to guide management decisions. We aimed to assess the feasibility and outcomes of a standardized management protocol for AE-ILD. Methods We performed a retrospective cohort study of patients with AE-ILD admitted to hospital between January 2015 and August 2019. Patients were managed with a standardized protocol including chest computed tomography (CT) at diagnosis, pulse corticosteroid treatment, and a follow-up CT 7 days after corticosteroid pulse. The association between idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis (IPF) versus non-IPF diagnosis and transplant-free survival within 1-year of AE-ILD was assessed using adjusted Cox proportional hazards regression survival analysis. Associations with CT chest improvement 7 days after corticosteroid pulse were secondarily assessed. Results 89 patients with AE-ILD were identified. 1-year transplant-free and overall survival were 20.2 and 51.7%, respectively. Protocol adherence to pulse corticosteroids was high (95.5%). A diagnosis of IPF was associated with higher risk of death or transplant at 1-year versus a non-IPF diagnosis [hazard ratio (HR) 2.23, 95% CI 1.19-4.17, p = 0.012]. There were no significant associations with 7-day CT improvement; however, CT improvement was associated with higher transplant-free survival (p = 0.02) and a lower risk of in-hospital mortality ([chi].sup.2 = 7.06, p = 0.01) on unadjusted analysis. Conclusions IPF is associated with a higher risk of death or transplant at 1-year as compared to a non-IPF diagnosis in patients with AE-ILD managed using a standardized protocol. Improvement on CT chest 7 days after corticosteroid pulse is associated with better survival., Author(s): Colin J. Adams [sup.1], Karan Chohan [sup.2], Dmitry Rozenberg [sup.1] [sup.3], John Kavanagh [sup.4], Gerhard Greyling [sup.4], Shane Shapera [sup.1], Jolene H. Fisher [sup.1] [sup.5] Author Affiliations: (1) grid.17063.33, [...]
- Published
- 2021
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