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Circadian rhythm of COPD symptoms in clinically based phenotypes. Results from the STORICO Italian observational study

Title: Circadian rhythm of COPD symptoms in clinically based phenotypes. Results from the STORICO Italian observational study
Authors: Scichilone Nicola; Antonelli Incalzi Raffaele; Blasi Francesco; Schino Pietro; Cuttitta Giuseppina; Zullo Alessandro; Ori Alessandra; Canonica Giorgio Walter; on behalf of STORICO study group; SARZANI RICCARDO
Contributors: Scichilone, Nicola; Antonelli Incalzi, Raffaele; Blasi, Francesco; Schino, Pietro; Cuttitta, Giuseppina; Zullo, Alessandro; Ori, Alessandra; Canonica Giorgio, Walter; on behalf of STORICO study, Group; Sarzani, Riccardo
Publication Year: 2019
Subject Terms: 24-hour symptom; Clinical phenotype; Real-world; Respiratory function; psy; edu
Description: BACKGROUND: Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (COPD) encompasses various phenotypes that severely limit the applicability of precision respiratory medicine. The present investigation is aimed to assess the circadian rhythm of symptoms in pre-defined clinical COPD phenotypes and its association with health-related quality of life (HR-QoL), the quality of sleep and the level of depression/anxiety in each clinical phenotype. METHODS: The STORICO (NCT03105999) Italian observational prospective cohort study enrolled COPD subjects. A clinical diagnosis of either chronic bronchitis (CB), emphysema (EM) or mixed COPD-asthma (MCA) phenotype was made by clinicians at enrollment. Baseline early-morning, day-time and nocturnal symptoms (gathered via the Night-time, Morning and Day-time Symptoms of COPD questionnaire), HR-QoL (via the St. George's Respiratory Questionnaire), anxiety and depression levels (via the Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale), quality of sleep (via COPD and Asthma Sleep Impact Scale), physical activity (via the International Physical Activity Questionnaire) as well as lung function were recorded. RESULTS: 606 COPD subjects (age 71.4 ± 8.2 years, male 75.1%) were studied. 57.9, 35.5 5.3 and 1.3% of the sample belonged to the CB, EM, MCA and EM + CB phenotypes respectively. The vast majority of subjects reported early-morning and day-time symptoms (79.5 and 79.2% in the CB and 75.8 and 77.7% in the EM groups); the proportion suffering from night-time symptoms was higher in the CB than in the EM group (53.6% vs. 39.5%, p = 0.0016). In both CB and EM, indiscriminately, the presence of symptoms during the 24-h day was associated with poorer HR-QoL, worse quality of sleep and higher levels of anxiety/depression. CONCLUSIONS: The findings highlight the primary classificatory role of nocturnal symptoms in COPD.
Document Type: article in journal/newspaper
Language: English
Relation: http://hdl.handle.net/11566/271482
Availability: http://hdl.handle.net/11566/271482
Rights: undefined
Accession Number: edsbas.6DF4222E
Database: BASE