COPD Clinical Trial
Official title:
Cognitive Impairment and Clinical Characteristics in Patients With Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease: Retrospective Study
Prior researches suggest the presence of impaired lung function may be linked to cognitive impairment (CI). A recent study shows that lung disease, and specifically Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) are associated to a greater risk of CI in a population of 14,184 individuals followed for over 23 years. Moreover, the study shows that low forced expiratory volume in 1 second (FEV1) is associated to an increased risk of dementia and MCI, indipendently of smoking habit.
Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) is considered "a progressive but potentially
treatable and preventable disease". The clinical view of COPD is moved from a lung-centered
model to a novel one that considers COPD as an "umbrella" term encompassing different
pulmonary and extra-pulmonary manifestations.
Prior researches suggest the presence of impaired lung function may be linked to cognitive
impairment (CI). Among these studies, one prospective found that a diagnosis of COPD is
associated with an increased risk of mild cognitive impairment (MCI), mainly nonamnestic MCI
(NA-MCI), in a dose-response relationship between COPD duration and risk of MCI. Moreover, CI
associated with severe COPD stage increases mortality. Among these studies only one shows
that CI decreases adherence to pharmacological and non-pharmacological therapies. However,
while it is well known that an MMSE score of 23-24 points or less is predictive of poor
inhaler technique no studies report the impact of CI on PR outcomes. It has been reported
that patients with MMSE < 24 walk lesser, at the basal level, than patients with a MMSE score
> 24 (146 ±134 versus 242 ± 152 m) in the six minutes walking tests (6MWT) but no data are
reported after rehabilitation. On the other hand, some papers report an association between
participation in exercise rehabilitation programs and enhanced performance on cognitive
tests.
The aim of this study is to compare cognitive functioning in patients with COPD referred for
pulmonary rehabilitation to the response of the programme itself. More specific objectives of
the present study are to:
- Study whether and to what extent CI in patients with COPD impacts outcomes of pulmonary
rehabilitation such as 6MW distance (6MWD), Barthel and Borg scales for assessing
dyspnea, Maugeri Foundation Respiratory Failure Questionnaire and the disease-specific
respiratory quality of life (QoL) [St. George's Respiratory Questionnaire (SGRQ) and the
Medical Research Council (MRC)].
- Investigate clinical and demographic characteristics of patients with COPD with
cognitive impairment.
The hypothesize is that COPD patients with CI have worse response to PR compared with
patients with no CI.
These results are important on the light of a personalized approach according to the so
called "P4 medicine", for predictive, preventive, personalized and participatory Recently,
the so-called "Rehabilomics" research framework, initially introduced r in traumatic brain
injury rehabilitation, was applied on COPD rehabilitation. The "Rehabilomics" represents an
exclusive and distinctive model in the path of the personalized-medicine approaches to
rehabilitation. Thus, in previousstudy the Rehabilomics-like approach was used to afford the
complexity of COPD rehabilitation, incorporating social/demographic data (i.e. gender,
education, presence of a caregiver) clinical, psychological/emotional traits, genetics (i.e.
DNA variants) and biological factors (i.e. DNA damage, levels of interleukins, et cet.) in a
real life setting.
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