Publication

Compliance of Pharmacotherapy with GOLD Guidelines: A Longitudinal Study in Patients with COPD

Journal Paper/Review - Mar 26, 2020

Units
PubMed
Doi

Citation
Grewe F, Clarenbach C, Thurnheer R, Leuppi J, Irani S, Frey M, Brutsche M, Brack T, Roeder M, Bradicich M, Sievi N, Kohler M. Compliance of Pharmacotherapy with GOLD Guidelines: A Longitudinal Study in Patients with COPD. Int J Chron Obstruct Pulmon Dis 2020; 15:627-635.
Type
Journal Paper/Review (English)
Journal
Int J Chron Obstruct Pulmon Dis 2020; 15
Publication Date
Mar 26, 2020
Issn Electronic
1178-2005
Pages
627-635
Brief description/objective

Objective
To evaluate the clinical implementation of pharmacotherapy recommendations for chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) based on the Global Initiative for chronic obstructive lung disease (GOLD) guidelines, in a longitudinal setting.

Methods
This is a sub-analysis of a prospective, non-interventional cohort study including patients with confirmed mild-to-very-severe COPD from seven pulmonary outpatient clinics in Switzerland. Follow-up visits took place annually for up to 7 years, from October 2010 until December 2016. For each visit, we evaluated the compliance of the prescribed pharmacotherapy with the concurrently valid GOLD guideline. We investigated whether step-ups or step-downs in GOLD stage or risk-group were accompanied by concordant changes in prescribed medication. Groups were compared via ANOVA.

Results
Data of 305 patients (62±7 years, 66% men) were analysed. In 59.1% of visits, the prescribed medication conformed to the respective valid GOLD-guideline. Patients with very severe COPD were most likely to receive pharmacotherapy in compliance with guidelines. Step-ups and step-downs in risk group, requiring escalation, or de-escalation of pharmacotherapy, were noticed in 24 and 43 follow-up visits, respectively. Step-ups were adequately implemented in 4 (16.7%) and step-downs in six cases (14.0%).

Conclusion
The compliance of COPD-pharmacotherapy with GOLD-guidelines is suboptimal, especially in lower risk groups. The high rates of missed out treatment-adjustments suggest that the familiarity of physicians with guidelines leaves room for improvement.