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P123 Use of blood eosinophils to predict outcomes under inhaled maintenance treatment in steroid-naïve COPD patients in primary care: new user cohort study using the clinical practice research datalink

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Introduction and objectives Blood eosinophils are a potentially useful biomarker to guide inhaled corticosteroid (ICS) treatment in COPD. We aimed to investigate whether blood eosinophil count predicts the effect of… Click to show full abstract

Introduction and objectives Blood eosinophils are a potentially useful biomarker to guide inhaled corticosteroid (ICS) treatment in COPD. We aimed to investigate whether blood eosinophil count predicts the effect of maintenance treatment with ICS versus non-ICS in routine primary care. Methods We used routinely collected data from UK primary care in the Clinical Practice Research Datalink, linked with Hospital Episode Statistics. Eligible patients were ≥40 years with COPD, history of smoking and diagnostic spirometry, not already treated with ICS, starting a new inhaled maintenance medication (intervention group: ICS; comparison group: long-acting bronchodilator, non-ICS) between 2005 and 2015. Primary analysis used the most recent blood eosinophil count in the two years before the new treatment, divided into high (≥150/µL) and low (<150/µL) groups. Primary outcome was time-to-first-exacerbation event after maintenance treatment initiation, compared between ICS and non-ICS groups, stratified by blood eosinophil group. Cox regression using co-variates likely to contribute to confounding by indication, including severity and baseline exacerbation frequency, investigated the interaction of blood eosinophils. Results Of 8452 eligible patients, 50.2% initiated an ICS (68.0% high eosinophil) and 49.8% a non-ICS treatment (67.3% high eosinophil), with no difference in eosinophils between treatment groups (p=0.486). Risk of exacerbation was higher in patients prescribed ICS than non-ICS, but with a lower risk seen in those with high eosinophils (hazard ratio 1.12, 95% CI 1.06–1.19) than low eosinophils (1.30, 95% CI 1.20–1.43) (p-value for interaction, 0.005) (see figure 1). The association was attenuated but remained significant (p=0.02) in a model adjusted for co-variates including severity and baseline exacerbation frequency.Abstract P123 Figure 1 Kaplan-Meier survival curves comparing time to first exacerbation after initiation of ICS treatment. Hazard ratio for interaction between the two eosinophil groups 0.86 (95% CI 0.77 to 0.95), p=0.0005 Conclusions This is the first study demonstrating significant predictive effect of blood eosinophils on ICS treatment outcomes in primary care, in a very large COPD population studied. In contrast to results from trials, the ICS group had worse outcomes, possibly due to residual confounding by indication. Blood eosinophils may be a low cost and acceptable way to identify patients most likely to benefit from ICS. Further work is needed to determine thresholds in primary care.

Keywords: primary care; maintenance; treatment; blood eosinophils; blood; eosinophil

Journal Title: Thorax
Year Published: 2018

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