Title: ???? ??:Is antitussives beneficial to COPD patients with cough?
1??????Is antitussives beneficial to COPD
patients with cough?
2 PBL--EBM???????
????(problem describe) Is antitussives beneficial to COPD patients with cough?
???(key word) antitussives, Expectorants ,COPD, Chronic cough
??????(Journal search) ????????????? Medline ?Cochrane?ACP?DARE other database
?????????(Main results) Level 1RCT Level 2cohort study Level 3case control Level 4case series Level 5 expert opinion
??????????(Reviewers' conclusions)
3Levels of Evidence
- Level ?Randomized Controlled Trial
- ( RCT )
- Level ?Cohort Study
- Level ?Case Control Study
- Level ?Case Series,Case Report
- Level ?Expert Opinion
Oxford center for EBM (May 2001)
4The type of question is important and can help
lead you to the best study design
5Oxford Center for Evidence-based Medicine Levels
of Evidence (May 2001)
Level Therapy
1a ????? Systematic review (????????????, ??????)
1b ????, ???? ?????????
1c All or none
2a ????? (????????, ??????)
2b ???? Cohort study ?????????????
2c "Outcomes" Research Ecological studies
3a ????? (??????-????, ??????)
3b ?? - ???? Case-control study
4 ????????? ????????? ??? - ????
5 ???????????, ????, ????, ????, ???????
6??
- Antitussives ???
- ?????,??????????,????????????,??????????
- COPD (Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease)
- Chronic bronchitis
- Emphysema
7Systemic Signs of Pulmonary Disease
8Component of COPD
Emphysema
Chronic bronchitis
Emphysema but no obstructive pulmonary disease
Simple bronchitis
Airflow limitation by spirometry
Asthma
Asthma with no airflow limitation
9Obstructive airway diseases
Asthma
Chronic. Bronchitis
?
Chronic Bronchiolitis
Emphysema
IRREVERSABLE REVERSABLE
(Adapted from Jeffery PJ. Thorax 199953129)
10Pharmacological treatments of COPD
- Antibiotics only for treating infectious
exacerbations (A) - Mucolytic (mukoinetic, mucoregulator) agents (D)
- Antioxidant agents (N-acetylcysteine) (B)
- Immunomodulators (B)
- Antitussives regular use is contraindicated (D)
- Vasodilators (NO) contraindicated in stable COPD
- Respiratory stimulants almitrine (B), doxapram
(D) - Narcotics (morhphine)
11???????????????
- A???? (Expectorant)
- ????????????,?????????????????,?????????,???????,?
???,????????????????????(Ammonium
Chloride)?????(Tincture of Ipecacuanha)????(Tinctu
re of Senega)?? - ???,?????? a medicine promoting expectoration
- B???????? (Antitussive)
- ?????????,????????,????????????????(Codeine),?????
,??????????? - any medicine used to suppress or relieve coughing
- C. Mucolytic
- ???????,?????????,?????????????????????????,??????
?????????????????????,?????????,??????
12Clinical Scenario
- ???, a 60 y/o retired taxi driver suffered from
chronic productive cough D.O.E. for years - COPD, diagnosed for 3 years
- FEV1 65 predicted, not respond to bronchodilator
- Smoking 1 PPD for 30 yrs, quitted for 1 year
- Rx Atrovent 2 puff bid only
- ??, ?????, ????????????
13?????????
- ?????????????
- ?????????
- ??????????????
- ?????????????????
- ???????
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15Background
- Individuals with chronic bronchitis or chronic
obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) may suffer
recurrent exacerbations with an increase in
volume and/or purulence of sputum and any therapy
that reduced the number of exacerbations would be
useful. - There is a marked difference between countries in
terms of prescribing of mucolytics depending on
whether or not they are perceived to be effective.
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17Evidence-based problem solving
18Foreground Questions?????????????????
- (1) Patient
- ???????????,?????????????????????????????????????
- (2) Intervention
- ????
- (3) Comparison
- ????(placebo)???
- (4) Outcome
- ?????
- ????????????(FEV1/PEFR)?
- ????????(?????????)or ???????
PICO
19?????????
- ?????????????
- ?????????
- ??????????????
- ?????????????????
- ???????
20????
- EBM review
- Pubmed
- Limitation randomized control, meta-analysis,
controlled clinical trial, guideline
21Are the results of the study valid?
- Was the assignment of patients to treatments
randomized? - Was the randomization list concealed?
- Were the groups similar at the start of the
trial? - Aside from the experimental intervention, were
the groups treated equally? - Were patients, health workers, and study
personnel blind to treatment? - Was follow-up complete?
- Were patients analyzed in the groups to which
they were randomized (intention-to-treat
analysis)? - JAMA 1993 270(21) 2598-2601
22Users Guides to the Medical LiteratureUsing
Electronic Health Information resources
- Clinical Evidence www.clinicalevidence.org
- Best Evidence
- (ACP J club, Evidence-Based Medicine)
- Cochrane Library
- Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews
- Database of Abstract of Reviews of Effectiveness
- Practice Guidelines www.guideline.org
- Other resources
- www.uptodate.com, www.mdconsult.com
- JAMA 20002831875-9
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28Review Mucolytic drugs reduce exacerbations,
illness days, and antibiotic use in chronic
bronchitis and COPD
- Question In patients with chronic bronchitis or
chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), do
mucolytic drugs reduce exacerbations or days of
illness? - Data sources Studies were identified by
searching the Cochrane Airways Group register of
studies (compiled by searching MEDLINE,
EMBASE/Excerpta Medica, and CINAHL and hand
searching respiratory journals and meeting
abstracts). Reference lists of articles were
scanned, and researchers in the field and
pharmaceutical companies were contacted. - Study selection Studies were selected if they
were randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled
trials of oral mucolytic drugs taken regularly
for gt 2 months by adults who were gt 20 years of
age and had chronic bronchitis or COPD. Studies
on inhaled mucolytic drugs, combinations of
mucolytic drugs with antibiotics or
bronchodilators, deoxyribonucleases, and such
proteases as trypsin were excluded, as were
studies on patients with asthma or cystic
fibrosis. - Data extraction Data were extracted on study
country and duration, clinical criteria, patient
age, smoking, intervention, and quality of study
methods. Summary statistics were used. Main
outcomes were number of acute exacerbations, days
of illness, and days taking antibiotics. - Main results 23 of 27 studies that met selection
criteria reported data on the main outcomes.
Patients had chronic bronchitis in 21 studies and
COPD in 2 studies. Follow-up ranged from 2 to 24
months (mean 6 mo). Studies were done in Italy
(11 studies), the United Kingdom (4 studies),
Sweden (2 studies), Europe (2 studies), Germany
(2 studies), Denmark (1 study), and the United
States (1 study). Mucolytic drugs were better
than placebo for reducing exacerbations (P lt
0.001), days of illness (P lt 0.001), and days of
antibiotic use (P lt 0.001)
Dr. P.J. Poole, University of Auckland, Auckland,
New Zealand. ACP J Club, Volume
136(2).March/April 2002.54
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40Oral N-acetylcysteine and exacerbation rates in
patients with chronic bronchitis and severe
airway obstruction- British Thoracic Society
Research committeeThorax 198540832-5
- A RCT enrolled 181 patients with chronic
bronchitis, FEV1lt50 predicted - Oral acetylcysteine 200 mg tid vs. Placebo for 5
months - Detailed daily symptom diaries about
breathlessness, sputum appearance, volume, cough,
difficulty in expectoration, days in bed or in
hospital , assessed monthly by clinician - Outcome of exacerbation, days in bed, days
taking ABx, mean change in FEV1 - The outcome in Tx group was a little better, but
the differences did not reach statistical
significance
41Orally administered N-acetylcysteine may improve
general well-being in patients with mild chronic
bronchitis Respiratory Medicine 199488531-5
- A RCT comparing acetylcysteine 600mg bid vs.
placebo for 22 weeks in 105 chronic bronchitis
patients with FEV1 gt 50 predicted - Using an established psychiatric instrument
General Health Questionnaire and visual analogue
scales for subjective symptoms, functional
capacityetc. - of observed exacerbations was unexpectedly low
in both groups. - No significant difference in subjective symptom
scores, FEV1, or in or severity of
exacerbations significant beneficial effect on
general well-being
42Number of exacerbations per patient per month
From Poole The Cochrane Library, Volume
(4).2004.
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44Patients with no exacerbations in study period
From Poole The Cochrane Library, Volume
(4).2004.
45?????????
- ?????????????
- ?????????
- ??????????????
- ?????????????????
- ???????
46The specific, answerable clinical question
- In patients with stable COPD or chronic
bronchitis - Do Mucolytics, as compared with placebo
- Be able to
- Relieve symptoms (cough frequency, severity, ease
in bringing up sputum) - Decrease exacerbations?
- Reduce days of illness?
- Attenuate declination in lung function?
- Improve quality of life?
47What we have now
- Oral mucolytic drugs for exacerbations of chronic
obstructive pulmonary disease systematic review - BMJ 2001 322 1-6
- Review oral mucolytic agents reduce
exacerbations and sick days in chronic
bronchitis- - ACP J club 1999 131 14
- The Cochrane database of systematic reviews
Mucolytic agents for chronic bronchitis - (Date of most recent update12-5-2004)
48COPD mucolytics reduce exacerbations and days of
disability
- Clinical bottom line (level 1a)
- Patients with chronic bronchitis who are given
mucolytics, are more likely to have a greater
reduction in exacerbations per month, than those
given placebo. - Patients given mucolytics are more likely to have
a greater reduction in days of disability per
month than those given placebo. - Patients given mucolytics are less likely to have
an improvement in FEV1 or FVC than those given
placebo. - There is no clear difference in number of adverse
effects.
Poole and Black The Cochrane Library 1999 3
1-10
49Review mucolytic drugs reduce exacerbations,
illness days, and antibiotic use in chronic
bronchitis and chronic obstructive pulmonary
disease Evidence-Based Medicine 2002 753
- Data sourcesStudies were identified by searching
the Cochrane Airways Group register of studies
(compiled by searching Medline, EMBASE/Excerpta
Medica, and CINAHL, and hand searching
respiratory journals and meeting abstracts).
Reference lists of articles were scanned, and
researchers in the field and pharmaceutical
companies were contacted. - Study selectionStudies were selected if they
were randomised, double blind, placebo controlled
trials of oral mucolytic drugs taken regularly
for 2 months by adults who were gt 20 years of age
and had chronic bronchitis or COPD. Studies on
inhaled mucolytic drugs, combinations of
mucolytic drugs with antibiotics or
bronchodilators, deoxyribonucleases, and such
proteases as trypsin were excluded, as were
studies on patients with asthma or cystic
fibrosis. - Main results23 of 27 studies that met selection
criteria reported data on the main outcomes.
Patients had chronic bronchitis in 21 studies and
COPD in 2 studies. Follow up ranged from 2 to 24
months (mean 6 mo). Studies were done in Italy
(11 studies), the UK (4 studies), Sweden (2
studies), Europe (2 studies), Germany (2
studies), Denmark (1 study), and the USA (1
study). Mucolytic drugs were better than placebo
for reducing exacerbations (p lt 0.001), days of
illness (p lt 0.001), and days of antibiotic use
(p lt 0.001) (table ).
?
50Mucolytic agents for chronic bronchitis or
chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (Cochrane
Review)From The Cochrane Library, Issue 4, 2004.
- Objectives To assess the effects of oral
mucolytics in adults with stable chronic
bronchitis or COPD. - Selection criteria Randomised trials that
compared oral mucolytic therapy with placebo for
at least two months in adults with chronic
bronchitis or COPD. Studies of people with asthma
and cystic fibrosis were excluded. - Main results 23 trials were included.
- Compared with placebo, there was a significant
reduction in the number of exacerbations per
patient with oral mucolytics (weighted mean
difference (WMD) -0.066 per month, 95 confidence
interval -0.077, -0.054, plt0.001). - Using the annualised rate of exacerbations in the
control patients of 2.7 per year, this is a 29
reduction. - The number of days of disability also fell (WMD
-0.56, 95 confidence interval -0.77, -0.35,
plt0.001). - The number of patients who remained
exacerbation-free was greater in the mucolytic
group (OR 2.22, 95 confidence interval 1.93,
2.54, plt0.001). - There was no difference in lung function or in
adverse effects reported between treatments. - Reviewers' conclusions In subjects with chronic
bronchitis or COPD, treatment with mucolytics was
associated with a small reduction in acute
exacerbations and a somewhat greater reduction in
total number of days of disability.
51Number of exacerbations per patient per month
From Poole The Cochrane Library, Volume
(4).2004.
52Patients with no exacerbations in study period
From Poole The Cochrane Library, Volume
(4).2004.
53Mucolytic drugs v placebo for chronic bronchitis
or chronic obstructive pulmonary disease
Evidence-Based Medicine 2002 753
54Details of studies included in systematic review
Study Country pt Clinical Criteria Mean age smoker Length of study Intervention Quality
Allegra 1996 Italy 662 Chronic bronchitis (FEV1 65 pred) 60.1 73 current 6 m Carbocisteine lysine 2.7g/d 5
Babolini 1980 Italy 744 Chronic bronchitis (FEV1 2.18 l) NA 64.3 6 Acetylcysteine 200mg bid 4
Boman 1983 Sweden 259 Chronic bronchitis (FEV1 80 pred) 51.9 100 6 Acetylcysteine 200mg bid 2
McGavi 1985 UK 181 Chronic bronchitis (FEV1 0.86 l) 63.4 99 5 Acetylcysteine 200mg tid 4
Nowak 1999 Europe 313 COPD (FEV1 60 pred) 57 NA 8 Acetylcysteine 600mg bid 2
55Mean (SD) of exacerbations /subject/ month,
weighted mean difference, and 95 C.I.
56Lung function at end of study period
57Are the results clinically significant?
- P value
- ??????????? ???????, ?????????, ??????
??????????????????? - Confidence interval
- ????? (RR) ??????, ????95???????????95????????
??? ?????????????? (precision)
???????????????????????
58Mucolytic drugs vs placebo for chronic bronchitis
or chronic obstructive pulmonary disease
- Dr. P.J. Poole, University of Auckland, Auckland,
New Zealand. - ACP J Club, Volume 136(2).March/April 2002.54
59NNT (number needed to treat)
- ??????????????????(number needed to treat,
NNT)???????????????. - NNT ????????????(absolute risk reduction,
ARR)????, ?? NNT 1/ARR. - ?NNT??,??????????
60??????????,???????????????
?? COPD No exacerbation ???? Mucolytic? P?
?? COPD No exacerbation 42 ?? 60?? lt 0.05
?? COPD No exacerbation 58 ??? 40 ???
- RRR(relative risk reduction) (58-40)/58 31
- ARR(absolutre risk reduction) 58-4018
- NNT(number needed to treat to prevent one
failure) 1/ (ARR) 5.5.. - ????????RRR?????,??????????NNT????????100?COPD????
?mucolytic??,???58?????,??100??????mucolytic??,???
40?????,??mucolytic??,???100?COPD???????18?????,??
?,???5.5????????,???NNT????
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63COPD mucolytics reduce exacerbations and days of
disability
64?????????
- ?????????????
- ?????????
- ??????????????
- ?????????????????
- ???????
65Can the results be applied to my patients?
- Meet all the inclusion criteria
- Not violate any of the exclusion criteria
- Is your patient so different from those in the
trial that its results should not be applied? - Differences in the illness
- Patient differences in drug metabolism, immune
response, environmental factors - Compliance
- Comorbid condition
66Will the results help me in caring for my
patients?
- Can the results be applied to my patient care?
- How great would the benefit actually be for your
individual patient? - Were all clinically important outcomes
considered? - Are the likely treatment benefits worth the
potential harms and costs? - Do your patient and you have a clear assessment
of their values and preferences? - Are they satisfied by this therapy and its
consequences?
67Will You Prescribe Mucolytics to Your Patient?
- Compared with placebo, of exacerbations was
significantly reduced by 29 in subjects taking
mucolytics NNT for one subject to have no
exacerbation in the study period was 6 - The typical patient with 23 exacerbations/yr
could expect 1 less attack by taking the drug
daily for 2 yrs - The reduction in sick days from an average of 4
to 3.4 d/mo - No effect was observed for FEV1
- Adverse effects were mainly mild GI complaints
no difference between Tx and placebo group
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69- Antitussives
- Regular use of antitussives is not recommended in
COPD since cough can have a significant
protective effect. - Mucolytics
- There may be isolated circumstances (especially
in the presence of copious, thick secretions) in
which an individual with COPD might benefit from
a mucolytic or mucoactive agent. - Evidence supporting this recommendation is of
classes A - In general, however, drugs from this class have
not been shown to be effective and are not
recommended as treatment for COPD.
70Wake up
71Take Home Message
- Regular use of mucolytics for at least 2 months
significantly reduces exacerbations and days of
illness in patients with chronic bronchitis and
COPD - The effect of mucolytics on days of illness was
greater then the effect on of exacerbations - The benefit from oral mucolytic agents is too
small to justify routine use Treatment may be
not cost-effective - Clinicians should manage chronic bronchitis by
encourage smoking cessation, exercise
rehabilitation, and treating airway obstruction
72??????!
73Step 3---??????(critical appraisal of evidence)
- 1? Are the results of this individual study
valid ? - (1)Was the assignment of patients to treatment
randomized ? And was the randomization list
concealed ? - (2)Was follow-up of patients sufficiently long
and complete? - (3)Were all patients analyzed in the groups to
which they randomized? - (4)Were patients and clinician kept blind to
treatment? - (5)Were the groups treated equally , apart from
the experimental treatment? - 6) Were the groups similar at the start of the
trial?
742. Are the valid results of this randomized
trial important ?CER Control Event Rate ,
???(???)????????ERRExperimental Event Rate ,
???????????ARR Absolute Risk ReductionCER-EER
ARI Absolute Risk Increase CER-EER
NNT Number needed to be treat1/ARR
????????????????????
NNH Number needed to be harmed1/ARI
?????????????????????
75See Table III , ??cough????
13.8 cs/h x100h 2x1000
- CER 69
0.69 - EER 55.5
0.555 - ARRCER-EER0.135
- NNT1/ARR7.48
- ???stable COPD??,?100?????1000??????,?placebo???8
?cough????1?cough??? -
baseline
11.1 cs/h x 100h
2x1000
placebo
76Again see Table III
13.8 cs/h x 100h
- CER
69 0.69 -
- EER
53.5 0.535 - ARRCER-EER0.155
- NNT1/ARR6.457
- ???stable COPD??,?100?????1000??????,?
codeine???7?cough????1?cough??? -
2 x 1000
baseline
10.7 cs/h x 100h
2 x 1000
codeine
77- 2. Are the valid results of this randomized
trial important ? - 3. Can you apply this valid , important evidence
about therapy in caring for your patients?
78????