Prevalence of persistent blood eosinophilia: relation to outcomes in patients with COPD

Author:

Casanova Ciro,Celli Bartolome R.,de-Torres Juan P.,Martínez-Gonzalez Cristina,Cosio Borja G.ORCID,Pinto-Plata Victor,de Lucas-Ramos Pilar,Divo Miguel,Fuster Antonia,Peces-Barba Germán,Calle-Rubio MyriamORCID,Solanes Ingrid,Aguero Ramón,Feu-Collado Nuria,Alfageme Inmaculada,De Diego Alfredo,Romero Amparo,Balcells Eva,Llunell Antonia,Galdiz Juan B.,Marin Margarita,Moreno Amalia,Cabrera Carlos,Golpe Rafael,Lacarcel Celia,Soriano Joan B.ORCID,López-Campos José Luis,Soler-Cataluña Juan J.,Marin José M.ORCID

Abstract

The impact of blood eosinophilia in chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) remains controversial.To evaluate the prevalence and stability of a high level of blood eosinophils (≥300 cells·μL–1) and its relationship to outcomes, we determined blood eosinophils at baseline and over 2 years in 424 COPD patients (forced expiratory volume in 1 s (FEV1) 60% predicted) and 67 smokers without COPD from the CHAIN cohort, and in 308 COPD patients (FEV1 60% predicted) in the BODE cohort. We related eosinophil levels to exacerbations and survival using Cox hazard analysis.In COPD patients, 15.8% in the CHAIN cohort and 12.3% in the BODE cohort had persistently elevated blood eosinophils at all three visits. A significant proportion (43.8%) of patients had counts that oscillated above and below the cut-off points, while the rest had persistent eosinophil levels <300 cells·μL–1. A similar eosinophil blood pattern was observed in controls. Exacerbation rates did not differ in patients with and without eosinophilia. All-cause mortality was lower in patients with high eosinophils compared with those with values <300 cells·μL–1 (15.8% versus 33.7%; p=0.026).In patients with COPD, blood eosinophils ≥300 cells·μL–1 persisting over 2 years was not a risk factor for COPD exacerbations. High eosinophil count was associated with better survival.

Funder

AstraZeneca

Publisher

European Respiratory Society (ERS)

Subject

Pulmonary and Respiratory Medicine

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