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Clinical Trials/NCT00668408
NCT00668408
Unknown
Phase 4

Long-Term Oxygen Therapy (LTOT) in Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (COPD) Patients With Moderate Chronic Hypoxemia and Chronic Heart Failure (CHF)

Azienda Ospedaliero-Universitaria Careggi64 sites in 1 country1,000 target enrollmentMay 2008

Overview

Phase
Phase 4
Intervention
Not specified
Conditions
Lung Diseases, Obstructive
Sponsor
Azienda Ospedaliero-Universitaria Careggi
Enrollment
1000
Locations
64
Primary Endpoint
The primary outcome of the study is mortality.
Last Updated
16 years ago

Overview

Brief Summary

In patients with both COPD and CHF, moderate chronic hypoxemia is caused by a combination of intrapulmonary and extrapulmonary factors. The hypothesis of this study is that adequate medical therapy for both conditions can correct the moderate hypoxemia by improving the underlying mechanisms without the need of LTOT. If this hypothesis is correct, the study will provide a valuable information to the Italian Agency of drugs (Agenzia Italiana del Farmaco, AIFA) to reduce the inappropriate use of LTOT for COPD patients with moderate hypoxemia and CHF, and will help the Italian National Health Service to reduce both the direct and indirect costs of unnecessary LTOT.

Detailed Description

Long-term oxygen treatment (LTOT) improves survival of COPD patients with severe hypoxemia . The improved survival was proven in COPD patients with severe chronic hypoxemia (PaO2\< or = 55 mmHg), providing oxygen was delivered for = or \>15 hours/day. Since then, \> 15 hours/day LTOT has become the standard treatment for COPD patients with severe hypoxemia. LTOT has been extended without evidence to COPD patients with moderate hypoxemia (55\< PaO2 \<60mmHg), when associated with some clinical and laboratory signs of cardiac diseases and to patients with decreased oxygen saturation (SO2 \< 90%) during exercise or sleep. Chronic heart failure (CHF) is a common co-morbidity of COPD (\>30% ) particularly in the elderly. Whether LTOT improves survival in patients with moderate chronic hypoxemia and CHF is unknown. This is an issue of concern because of the potential importance of LTOT in severe COPD, and of the cost of LTOT (about Euro 250 millions/year in Italy). The aim of this 3 year randomized clinical trial is to investigate whether, in COPD patients with moderate hypoxemia associated with CHF treatment including LTOT is no different from treatment without LTOT in term of survival and of exacerbations, hospitalizations, and quality of life. The study will be conducted in 76 Italian hospital pulmonary units, and will start on May 15th 2008 and end on October 31st 2012. One thousand stable COPD patients treated according to COPD and CHF international guidelines will be randomized to treatment including LTOT (Study Group) or treatment without LTOT (Control Group). All patients will regularly undergo clinical assessment, arterial blood gases (3 monthly), and Saint George's Respiratory Questionnaire (SGRQ, 6 monthly),and will be contacted with monthly telephone calls. Considering 1) the lack of evidence supporting LTOT in COPD patients with moderate hypoxemia and CHF, 2) the pathophysiology of CHF , and 3) the improvement of pharmacological treatment of both COPD and CHF, we expect that, after optimization of medical therapy, LTOT will not improve survival or frequency and severity of exacerbations and/or hospitalization, and not even quality of life due to the balance of small clinical benefits (improved exercise tolerance, better sleep) with the inconveniences associated with LTOT. This non-inferiority study is powered on survival, which is the primary outcome of the study.

Registry
clinicaltrials.gov
Start Date
May 2008
End Date
October 2012
Last Updated
16 years ago
Study Type
Interventional
Study Design
Parallel
Sex
All

Investigators

Eligibility Criteria

Inclusion Criteria

  • Age 40 \> 80 years
  • Confirmed COPD (GOLD criteria)
  • Moderate and stable hypoxemia (55\< PaO2 \<65 mmHg)
  • Clinical signs of CHF (ESC criteria)
  • Ex-smokers (\> 20 pack/years) since at least 3 months

Exclusion Criteria

  • Clinical instability and/or exacerbation
  • Congenital heart diseases
  • Lung cancer
  • Thoracic restrictive disorders
  • Other coexisting diseases influencing 3-yr survival

Outcomes

Primary Outcomes

The primary outcome of the study is mortality.

Time Frame: 3 years

Secondary Outcomes

  • Secondary endpoint of the study is to evaluate whether the appropriate medical treatment without LTOT is not inferior to medical treatment with LTOT in terms of quality of life, rate and severity of exacerbation, number of hospital admissions.(3 years)

Study Sites (64)

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