Elsevier

Respiratory Medicine

Volume 104, Issue 9, September 2010, Pages 1319-1325
Respiratory Medicine

Sniff nasal inspiratory pressure versus IC/TLC ratio as predictors of mortality in COPD

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.rmed.2010.03.001Get rights and content
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Summary

Background

Hyperinflation is a recognized adverse prognostic factor in COPD. As the sniff inspiratory nasal pressure (SnIP) principally reflects the severity of hyperinflation in COPD, we hypothesized that it might also be a predictor of mortality. We therefore compared the SnIP to the inspiratory capacity-to-total lung capacity (IC/TLC) ratio as predictors of mortality in advanced COPD.

Methods

A retrospective mortality analysis of 110 patients with COPD (mean FEV1 1.01 litres, 37% predicted; 66% male) was performed. All patients had SnIP and lung volume measurements performed. The power of each test to predict mortality was determined, and predicted survival curves were created for both the SnIP and IC/TLC ratio.

Results

37 patients (34%) died during the study period (29 male, 8 female). Mortality rates were analysed with a Chi2 test; there was a significant trend towards male death (mortality rate male vs. female; 39.7% vs. 21.6% respectively; χ2p = 0.058, Chi 3.6). ROC curves demonstrated that both SnIP and IC/TLC ratio are predictors of mortality, but analysis by Cox proportional hazards suggested the SnIP has a stronger predictive power (SnIP vs. IC/TLC ratio; p = 0.017 vs 0.525; HR 0.97 vs 0.99 respectively), and analysis of the area under ROC curves (AUC) suggest that SnIP is a better discriminator than IC/TLC ratio (AUC SnIP vs IC/TLC; 0.679 vs 0.618).

Conclusions

The SnIP conveys at least as much predictive power for mortality in COPD as hyperinflation determined by IC/TLC ratio. This test is cheaper, quicker and easier than measuring lung volumes by plethysmography.

Keywords

COPD
Respiratory muscle strength
Hyperinflation

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