west china medical publishers
Author
  • Title
  • Author
  • Keyword
  • Abstract
Advance search
Advance search

Search

find Author "TAO Hongyan" 2 results
  • Meta-analysis of clinical features and prognosis of acute exacerbations of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease patients with eosinophilia

    Objective To evaluate the correlation between blood eosinophilia and clinical characteristics, readmission rate and mortality in patients with acute exacerbation of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (AECOPD). Methods PubMed, Embase, Web of Science, Cochrane Library, China National Knowledge Infrastructure, Wanfang Data, VIP, and CBM databases were searched until October 31, 2021. Two researchers independently screened the literature, extracted the data, and evaluated the bias risk of the included studies. Meta-analysis was conducted by Rev Man v.5.4. Results Finally, 76 observational studies met the inclusion criteria, including 15 English literatures and 61 Chinese literatures. There were 8240 patients (34.20%) in the eosinophilia group (EOS≥2%) and 15854 cases (65.8%) in the eosinophil normal group (EOS<2%). Results of meta-analysis: (1) Inflammatory Index: eosinophilia group had lower C-reactive protein [MD=–8.44, 95%CI (–10.59, –6.29), P<0.05], and lower neutrophil to lymphocyte ratio [MD=–2.47, 95%CI (–3.13, –1.81), P<0.05]. (2) Hospitalization: eosinophilia group had shorter hospital stay [MD=–2.23, 95%CI (–2.64, –1.81), P<0.05] and lower in-hospital mortality [OR=0.41, 95%CI (0.31, 0.53), P<0.05], lower mechanical ventilation rate [OR=0.59, 95%CI (0.47, 0.75), P<0.05], lower hormone use rate [OR=0.91, 95%CI (0.85, 0.96), P<0.05]. (3) Follow-up results: eosinophilia group had a lower rate of readmission at 1 year [OR=0.78, 95%CI (0.66, 0.92), P<0.05] and a lower rate of death at 1 year [OR=0.78, 95%CI (0.62, 0.97), P<0.05]. Conclusions AECOPD patients with eosinophilia group were characterized by lower inflammatory indicators, shorter hospital stay, shorter in-hospital mortality, lower mechanical ventilation rate, lower hormone use rate, lower rate of acute exacerbation readmission, lower mortality rate and lower rate of follow-up after 1 year. This kind of patients with mild disease, good treatment effect, low risk of acute exacerbation.

    Release date: Export PDF Favorites Scan
  • Prevalence of Depression in Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease and Risk Factors Analysis

    Objective To investigate the prevalence of depression in patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease ( COPD) and risk factors. Methods 215 patients with stable COPD were recruited in the study. The Patient Health Questionnaire-9 ( PHQ-9) standardized scale were performed for the depression survey. Meanwhile CAT, pulmonary function test and the history taking ( sex, age, height, weigh, smoking status, education level) were applied to evaluate all the COPD patients. The COPD patients were classified into A, B, C, and D groups according to 2011 GOLD new COPD classification system. Pearson chi-square test and multivariate logistic modeling were used to estimate the prevalence of depression and the risk factors. Results The prevalence of depression in COPD patients whose PHQ-9 scores ≥7 was 37.7% with 18.5% , 35.8% , 46.5% , and 62.5% respectively in A, B, C, and D groups. There was significant difference in prevalence between each groups ( Plt;0.05) . Compared with the COPD patients without depression, the COPD patients with depression had younger age, more female, higher education level, higher CAT scores and smaller means of body mass index ( BMI) . Logistic analysis revealed that depression in COPD was associated with age, sex, education level, BMI, FEV1% pred and CAT scores. The patients who with younger age, female sex, higher education level, lower FEV1% pred, lower BMI and higher CAT scores were had higher rsik to be complicated with depression. However no significant difference was observed between different FEV1 /FVC or smoking status. Conclusions This study confirms the high prevalence of depression in patients with stable COPD, and the prevalence in A, B, C, and D groups of COPD are different. Sex, age, education level, FEV1% pred, BMI, and CAT scores are the risk factors of depression in COPD.

    Release date:2016-09-13 03:53 Export PDF Favorites Scan
1 pages Previous 1 Next

Format

Content