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New
Prognostic Indicator for patients with IPF
Friday, February 20, 2009
There may be a new way to
predict mortality in patients with idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis
(IPF), a devastating disease that slowly petrifies the lungs.
Most patients live only three years after diagnosis on average;
however, some remain stable for many years, while for others, the
disease progresses more rapidly.
“There is no
effective treatment [for IPF] and many patients, if eligible, are
referred for lung transplantation. Identification of surrogate
short-term measures of mortality is critical to the management
and study of patients with IPF.” explained lead author
Charlene Fell, M.D., of the Division of Respiratory Medicine at
the University of Calgary.
The study found that maximal
oxygen uptake during exercise, or VO2max, can predict mortality
in IPF patients. VO2max is an integrated measure of
cardiovascular, respiratory and neuromuscular function and is a
standard measure during cardiopulmonary exercise testing.
The
results were published in the first issue for March of the
American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine,
published by the American Thoracic Society.
Dr. Fell and
colleagues performed a retrospective analysis of 117 patients in
the University of Michigan’s Specialized Center of the
Pathobiology of Fibrotic Lung Disease database and analyzed their
oxygen uptake during exercise with their subsequent
mortality.
“We found that VO2max examined as a
continuous variable does not predict mortality in IPF. However,
baseline threshold VO2max of 8.3 ml/kg/min predicts mortality in
these patients,” wrote Dr. Fell.
Those patients with
a VO2max of less than 8.3 ml/kg/min had a risk of death more than
three times that of patients whose VO2max was above the
threshold. VO2max was compared with two other predictors of
survival in IPF, oxygen desaturation during a six-minute walk
test (6MWT) and resting arterial oxygen partial pressure (PaO2),
and in both cases, VO2max was found to be a more robust
predictor.
“Furthermore, VO2max is easier to use in
the clinical setting than other predictors which require
cumbersome calculations,” said Dr. Fell.
“One caveat to the VO2max
predictor is that only a small number of patients had a VO2max
below the 8.3 ml/kg/min threshold in our study, [so] further
prospective studies are needed to validate these findings,”
said Dr. Fell. “If the value of this predictor is proven in
prospective studies, it may help clinicians prioritize patients
for lung transplantation or identify patients for clinical
trials.”
Research
Article PDF:
http://www.sflorg.com/comm_center/medical/pdf/p859_89_01.pdf
Source: American Thoracic
Society
Permalink:
http://www.sflorg.com/comm_center/medical/p859_89.html
Time Stamp: 2/20/2009 at
5:27:52 AM UTC
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