4.6 Article

Living and dying with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease

Journal

JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN GERIATRICS SOCIETY
Volume 48, Issue 5, Pages S91-S100

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/j.1532-5415.2000.tb03147.x

Keywords

COPD; emphysema; quality of life; outcomes; end of life; dysnea; artificial respiration

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OBJECTIVE: To characterize chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) over patients' last 6 months of life. STUDY DESIGN: A retrospective analysis of a prospective cohort from the Study to Understand Prognoses and Preferences for Outcomes and Risks of Treatments (SUPPORT). SETTING: Hospitalization for exacerbation of COPD at five US teaching hospitals. PARTICIPANTS: COPD patients who died within 1 year (n = 416) among 1016 enrolled. METHODS: Interview and medical record data were organized into time windows beginning with death and ending 6 months earlier. OUTCOME MEASURES: Days in hospital, prognosis, illness severity, function, symptoms, patients' preferences, and impacts on families. RESULTS: One-year survival was 59%, 39% had greater than or equal to 3 comerbidities, and 15 to 25% of the patients' last 6 months were in hospitals. Exacerbation etiologies included respiratory infection (47%) and cardiac problems (30%). Better quality of life predicted longer survival (ARR: 0.36; 95% CI, 0.19-0.87) as did heart failure etiology of exacerbation (ARR: 0.57; CI, 0.40, 0.82). Estimates of survival by physicians and by prognostic model were well calibrated, although patients with the worst prognoses survived longer than predicted. Patients' estimates of prognosis were poorly calibrated. One-quarter of patients had serious pain throughout, and two-thirds had serious dyspnea. Patients' illnesses had a major impact on more than 25% of families. Patients' preferences for Do-Not-Resuscitate orders increased from 40% at 3 to 6 months before death to 77% within 1 month of death; their decisions not to use mechanical ventilation increased from 12 to 31%, and their preferences for resuscitation decreased from 52 to 23%. CONCLUSIONS: Patients with advanced COPD often die within :1 year and have substantial comorbidities and symptoms. Adequate description anchors improved care.

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