Abstract
Although frequent chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) exacerbation has been associated with the isolation of Pseudomonas aeruginosa (PA) in sputum cultures, it remains unknown whether the empirical use of anti-pseudomonal antibiotics can improve outcomes in patients with frequent COPD exacerbations. This multicenter retrospective cohort study evaluated whether the empirical use of anti-pseudomonal antibiotics improves the length of the hospital stay in patients with recurrent COPD exacerbation (≥ 2 admissions from April 1, 2008 to July 31, 2020). For statistical analysis, a log-linked Gamma model was used. Parameters were estimated using a generalized estimating equation model with an exchangeable correlation structure accounting for repeated observations from a single patient. Covariates included age, body mass index, home oxygen therapy use, respiratory rate, heart rate, oxygen use on admission, mental status, systemic steroid use, activities of daily living, and the number of recurrences. Hospital-specific effects were specified as fixed effects. In total, 344 patients and 965 observations of recurrent COPD exacerbations were selected. Anti-pseudomonal antibiotics were used in 173 patients (18%). The estimated change in the length of the hospital stay between anti-pseudomonal and non-anti-pseudomonal antibiotics groups was 0.039 days [95% confidence interval; − 0.083, 0.162]. Anti-pseudomonal antibiotics could not shorten the length of the hospital stay.
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Introduction
Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) is one of the most common respiratory diseases1. Patients with COPD frequently experience acute exacerbations; the event rate has been reported as approximately 1–2 times per year2. Following COPD exacerbations, background factors such as body mass index, obstruction, dyspnea, and exercise capacity may worsen3. Moreover, previous hospitalization for COPD exacerbation has been reported to be an important prognostic factor in patients with COPD exacerbation4,5.
Antibiotics are used mainly in patients with moderate or severe exacerbations and/or cough and sputum purulence6. Initial empirical treatment with narrow-spectrum antibiotics, such as aminopenicillin with clavulanic acid, macrolide, and tetracycline, is recommended for the entire population with COPD exacerbation, based on previous systematic reviews7,8. However, evidence that can guide decisions regarding whether to choose narrow-spectrum or broad-spectrum antibiotics is lacking. Based on expert opinions, local bacterial resistance patterns should be considered6. Furthermore, for patients with frequent exacerbations, anti-pseudomonal antibiotic use should be considered, as frequent COPD exacerbations have been reported as associated with the isolation of Pseudomonas aeruginosa (PA)9. However, it is unclear whether empirical treatment for PA can improve outcomes in patients with frequent COPD exacerbations10. Therefore, we aimed to assess the effectiveness of empirical anti-pseudomonal antibiotics in patients with recurrent COPD exacerbation. We hypothesized that anti-pseudomonal antibiotics would improve the length of the hospital stay in patients with frequent COPD exacerbation.
Methods
Study design
The study was designed as a multicenter retrospective cohort study across seven acute general hospitals in Japan: Awa Regional Medical Center, Hyogo Prefectural Amagasaki General Medical Center, Ichinomiyanishi Hospital, Kameda Medical Center, Kobe City Medical Center General Hospital, Saiseikai Yokohamashi Tobu Hospital, and Tokyo National Hospital. This study was conducted in accordance with the Declaration of Helsinki11. Additionally, this study was approved by the Institutional Review Board (IRB) of each hospital (registration number: 2020008), and the need for written informed consent was waived by the IRB of Ichinomiyanichi Hospital. This article was prepared in accordance with the Strengthening the Reporting of Observational Studies in Epidemiology (STROBE) Statement (Supplementary table 1)12.
Patient selection
The patient enrolment period depended on the storage terms of the electronic medical records in each hospital during the study period of April 1, 2008 to July 31, 2020. Inclusion criteria were age ≥ 40 years and hospital admittance due to COPD exacerbation ≥ two times during the study period. Hospital admittance due to COPD exacerbation was determined by an admission-precipitating diagnosis of COPD exacerbation based on the 10th revision of the International Statistical Classification of Diseases and Related Health Problems (ICD-10) code (ICD-10 code: J44.1). The exclusion criteria were as follows: empirical use of anti-pseudomonal antibiotics for multidrug-resistant PA that are available in Japan (i.e. colistin, polymyxin B, and fosfomycin).
A validation study of the patient selection based on the ICD-10 code (J44.1) was conducted at Ichinomiyanishi Hospital, Kameda Medical Center, Saiseikai Yokohamashi Tobu Hospital, and Tokyo National Hospital during the study period. Patients who were selected according to the above inclusion criteria were reviewed using the clinical charts from a respiratory physician to confirm the diagnosis of COPD exacerbation.
Data collection
The following patient data were collected from the Diagnosis Procedure Combination database: age, admission date, discharge date, sex, height, weight, activities of daily living as assessed by the Barthel index, comorbidities, tracheal intubation, and prognosis. Other patient data were collected through the review of electrical medical records: baseline COPD stage, type of inhaler used (inhaled corticosteroid, long-acting beta2-agonist, and long-acting muscarinic antagonist), home oxygen therapy use, prior PA isolation, vital signs (systolic blood pressure, respiratory rate, heart rate), mental status, oxygen use on admission, systemic steroid therapy, and antibiotic therapy.
Outcomes
The primary outcome was the length of the hospital stay. The outcome was measured repeatedly for each patient, and observations were nested within individuals and hospitals. Thus, patients and hospitals were considered as clusters.
Treatment of interest
The treatment of interest comprised the empirical use of anti-pseudomonal antibiotics on admission or the next day, regardless of the dose and route of administration. The treatment group was defined based on the initial antibiotics, and did not change according to modifications made to these antibiotics after the initial therapy. The anti-pseudomonal antibiotics comprised drugs that are available in Japan are the following: ceftazidime, cefozopran, cefepime, carbapenem (biapenem, doripenem, imipenem, and meropenem), piperacillin, piperacillin/tazobactam, aminoglycoside (gentamicin, tobramycin, and amikacin), quinolone (ciprofloxacin, levofloxacin, garenoxacin, and gatifloxacin), and aztreonam.
Covariates
Based on the previous literature, the following factors were selected as potential confounding factors: age, body mass index, home oxygen therapy use (binary data), respiratory rate, heart rate (≥ 109 beats/min or not), oxygen use on admission (binary data), mental status (altered mental status or not), systemic steroid use on admission or the next day regardless of the dose (binary data), activities of daily living (Barthel index), and the number of recurrences4,13,14,15,16,17,18.
Statistical analysis
Patient characteristics are summarized as numbers and percentages for categorical variables and as the median and interquartile range (IQR) for continuous variables. Our statistical analysis is summarized in the GitHub repository19. A log-linked Gamma model was used to evaluate the association between each variable and the length of the hospital stay20. Since repeated observations were obtained from a single patient, we used the generalized estimating equation method with an exchangeable correlation structure and robust standard error estimation. Hospital-specific effects were implemented as fixed effects.
Missing data were imputed using multiple imputations by chained equations on the assumption that data were missing at random21. Covariates of the outcome analysis (number of recurrences, age, COPD stage, home oxygen therapy use, oxygen use on admission, heart rate, respiratory rate, mental status, systemic steroid use, admitting hospital), the treatment variable (anti-pseudomonal antibiotic use), and the outcome variable (length of the hospital stay), in addition to systolic blood pressure as an auxiliary variable, were used to estimate the missing data22,23. The results for 100 imputed datasets were aggregated using Rubin’s rule24.
As a sensitivity analysis, we constructed a Bayesian model in which both patient- and hospital-specific effects were implemented as random effects using the complete case dataset25. This model can be described as follows:
where Yijk is the length of the i-th stay of patient j in hospital k, and the mean of the Gamma distribution (log(μ) with the shape parameter “s”). Besides, log(μ) is determined by explanatory variables, X, and the patient- and hospital-specific effects with a zero-sum constraint, bj and bk. Non-informative uniform distribution was used for all parameters. We set four separate sampling chains, each consisting of 5000 samples (including 4000 samples discarded for convergence). We evaluated the sampling convergence by visually inspecting the trace plot and by using the Gelman-Rubin statistic (R-hat), which indicated a good convergence when less than 1.1.
We also conducted a sensitivity analysis incorporating the COPD stage (Stage ≥ III or not), and the inhaler uses (inhaled corticosteroid, long-acting beta2-agonist, and long-acting muscarinic antagonist) into the a log-linked Gamma model. We imputed missing data using the same imputation method as the main analysis and combined the results. All statistical analyses were performed using R software version 4.0.2 (R Foundation for Statistical Computing, Vienna, Austria). For Bayesian model analyses, we used the probabilistic programming language, Stan (Stan Development Team).
Results
The validation study conducted across four hospitals revealed that patient selection for recurrent COPD exacerbation using the ICD-10 code resulted in 6 of 108 false positives (positive predictive value of 94%).
The patient selection flowchart is shown in Fig. 1. Among the selected 1574 patients with COPD exacerbation, 344 (22%) were hospitalized with an admission-precipitating diagnosis of COPD exacerbation ≥ 2 times during the study period (total number of observations/cases: 965). No patients were excluded because of the empirical use of anti-pseudomonal antibiotics for multidrug-resistant PA. The median number of recurrences was 3 (IQR: 2–4), and the median interval to the next hospitalization was 176 days (IQR: 55–507 days). The patients’ characteristics are summarized according to treatment in Table 1.
PA was detected in at least 75 of 344 patients (22%) during the study period. The strategies for empirical antibiotic use are summarized in Table 2 and Supplemental Table 2. Piperacillin/tazobactam was used in 70% of anti-pseudomonal antibiotic cases, and ceftriaxone was used in 73% of non-anti-pseudomonal antibiotic cases. Although a sputum sample was not collected in all cases, at least 75 of 965 observations/cases (8%) showed positive sputum-culture results for PA before admission (characterized in Supplemental Table 3). Among these 75 cases, anti-pseudomonal antibiotics were used in 20 (27%). None of the patients received double coverage with anti-pseudomonal antibiotics. Only 13% of cases received antibiotics covering atypical respiratory pathogens, including Mycoplasma pneumonia, Legionella spp., and Chlamydia spp. In the non-anti-pseudomonal antibiotics group, 18 of 474 cases (4%) were switched to anti-pseudomonal antibiotics during hospitalization.
The main analysis with multiple imputations and the generalized estimating equation revealed that the estimated change in the length of the hospital stay between the anti-pseudomonal and non-anti-pseudomonal antibiotics groups was 0.039 days [95% confidence interval; − 0.083, 0.162] (Table 3). This non-significant result was consistent with the results of the sensitivity analyses.
Discussion
This multicenter retrospective cohort study aimed to evaluate the effectiveness of empirical anti-pseudomonal antibiotics in terms of the length of the hospital stay in patients with frequent COPD exacerbation. We hypothesized that anti-pseudomonal antibiotics would reduce the length of the hospital stay. However, after adjusting for known confounding factors, the length of the hospital stay was not significantly different between the non-anti-pseudomonal and anti-pseudomonal antibiotics groups.
Although the PA detection rate in the present study was not lower than that in previous studies conducted in other countries (22% in the present study vs 4–13%), our hypothesis was not supported10,26. To the best of our knowledge, this study is the first to assess the effectiveness of anti-pseudomonal antibiotics in patients with recurrent COPD exacerbation. Our non-significant results are consistent with a previous prospective cohort study targeting hospitalized patients who had a positive culture result for PA in lower-tract specimens27. In this previous study, only 18% of patients were treated with anti-pseudomonal antibiotics and, after adjusting for confounding factors, inadequate initial antibiotic use was not associated with 12-month mortality. In contrast, inappropriate initial antibiotic use in the context of PA pneumonia has been reported as associated with increased 28-day mortality28. This difference in results may be due to differences in the proportion of patients with pneumonia. In a study of PA pneumonia, the 28-day mortality rate was 51%, which is comparable to that in other reports29. Although PA detection among patients with COPD has been reported as associated with extremely high 2-year all-cause mortality (23–41%), the 1-month mortality was 0%10,30. Considering the low 1-month mortality in patients with COPD exacerbation with PA isolation, empirical anti-pseudomonal antibiotics may not have adequate power to change the prognosis during hospitalization.
Initial treatment with non-anti-pseudomonal antibiotics may spare anti-pseudomonal antibiotic use. The median time to the next hospitalization was approximately half a year, and the previous use of antibiotics was detected in only one-third of observations. In the present study, although at least 70 observations/cases had positive sputum-culture results for PA before admission, PA was covered by empirical antibiotics in only 29% of cases. The patient characteristics and length of the hospital stay were not substantially different between anti-pseudomonal and non-anti-pseudomonal antibiotics groups. Furthermore, a change in the treatment from non-anti-pseudomonal antibiotics to anti-pseudomonal antibiotics occurred in only 4% of cases. Currently, multidrug-resistant organisms are a global concern31. The judicious use of broad-spectrum antibiotics can reduce the number of drug-resistant microorganisms32,33. Additionally, the use of broad-spectrum antibiotics is associated with a high cost of care and increased antibiotic-associated side effects, such as Clostridium difficile infection34. Therefore, a strategy of empirical narrow-spectrum antibiotic use in patients with recurrent COPD exacerbation may be an acceptable choice.
This multicenter retrospective study has numerous strengths. First, this study was based on daily clinical practice. In contrast to the GOLD 2020 report and a network meta-analysis of randomised controlled trials (RCTs), the antibiotics used in the present cohort were mainly intravenous antibiotics6,35. This may be due to the large number of elderly patients requiring some assistance; the average age of the present cohort was 80 years, and only 175 of 965 (18%) cases were fully independent. The present study results may better reflect hospitalized patients in daily practice rather than selected patients in RCTs8. Second, the number of observations was large compared to that in previous RCTs. The number of included patients/observations was much larger than that in a meta-analysis of four RCTs assessing the effect of currently used antibiotics on the length of the hospital stay (965 observations in the present study vs 393)8. Furthermore, an ongoing RCT targeting patients with at least one hospitalization within the prior 12 months and the detection of PA in a sputum culture has an expected total sample size of 150 (for the comparison of the anti-pseudomonal antibiotics group and the placebo group)36, which is far smaller than that in the present study. Thus, the present results may fill gaps not covered by these RCTs.
The main caveat regarding this study is that we only evaluated the length of the hospital stay. Although the length of the hospital stay is associated with the survival of hospitalized patients with COPD, as an outcome, it is short-term and soft. Based on the results of previous systematic reviews, hard outcomes such as in-hospital death and 30-day mortality could not be evaluated in the present study because of its sample size7,8. Moreover, the time to the next exacerbation could not be evaluated because of unmeasured confounding factors, such as post-admission baseline treatments for COPD. In a previous retrospective cohort study with unmeasured confounding factors, antibiotic use was associated with improvements in the long-term mortality and time to the next exacerbation37. Further large-scale studies are warranted to evaluate hard short-term and long-term outcomes38.
The present study had several other limitations. First, although our validation study showed a high predictive value for our patient selection strategy, the number of patients with COPD exacerbation was relatively small, considering that all of the hospitals were acute care and educational hospitals. Patient selection based on the ICD-10 code could have low sensitivity, and there could be many patients who should have been included in this study. In Japan, especially in our hospitals, payment is based on Diagnosis Procedure Combination: a system that reimburses hospitals based on the diagnosis code of hospitalized patients. Patients with a long length of stay or complications during hospitalization might be coded with diagnoses other than COPD exacerbation. Thus, the length of stay may have been right-truncated, and the effect of anti-pseudomonal antibiotics may have been skewed toward the null. Second, the interval between COPD exacerbations was not taken into account, and the variance correlation of the length of the hospital stay within each patient over multiple visits may differ from our expectations. We coped with this issue by using robust variances. Third, there may have been additional confounding factors. For example, although the number of patients with bronchiectasis was not different between both groups, it could be underestimated because bronchiectasis was detected based on ICD-10 (J47). In addition, we could not determine whether the PA isolation was regarded as colonization or pathogenic. We were unable to collect data regarding the other potential pathogens and the susceptibility results, dose of antibiotics, and the duration of COPD. Thus, we may not fully understand the relationship between clinicians’ decision-making process and patients’ outcomes. Further RCTs are needed to address unknown confounding factors. Forth, while we performed a sensitivity analysis using the COPD stage as a confounding factor, there was a substantial amount of missing data. In addition, we collected the information about the COPD Stage from the electronic medical records, and the data reliability might be low because physicians might not write it accurately.
Conclusions
The results of the present study suggest that empirical anti-pseudomonal antibiotics do not decrease the length of the hospital stay. However, further studies with larger sample sizes are needed to evaluate the effectiveness of anti-pseudomonal antibiotics more precisely.
Data availability
The datasets generated and/or analyzed during the current study are not publicly available due to the privacy issues but are available from the corresponding author on reasonable request.
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Acknowledgements
The authors would like to thank Hiroyuki Suzuki at the Department of Infectious Diseases of Iowa University in the United States for providing us with a suggestion on multidrug-resistant bacteria.
Funding
Funding for English-language editing was obtained from the Systematic Review Workshop Peer Support Group (SRWS-PSG: https://community.camp-fire.jp/projects/view/187310). The funder played no role in the study design, study execution, data analyses, data interpretation, or decision to submit the results.
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A.S., S.T., H.S., C.S., K.S., S.M., Yuya K., K.T., and Yuki Kataoka contributed to the conception and design of the work. A.S., S.T., H.S., C.S., K.S., S.M., Yuya K., K.T., and M.O. contributed to data acquisition. A.S., C.M., and Yuki Kataoka contributed to the data analysis and interpretation. A.S., C.M., and Yuki Kataoka drafted the manuscript. All authors revised the manuscript critically and approved the final version of the manuscript. A.S., C.M., S.T., H.S., C.S., K.S., S.M., Yuya K, K.T., M.O., and Yuki K agreed to be accountable for all aspects of any part of the work.
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Shiroshita, A., Miyakoshi, C., Tsutsumi, S. et al. Effectiveness of empirical anti-pseudomonal antibiotics for recurrent COPD exacerbation: a multicenter retrospective cohort study. Sci Rep 11, 20066 (2021). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-021-99640-y
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-021-99640-y
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