To the Editors:
We welcome the Global Initiative for Asthma (GINA) Asthma Challenge outlined in the recent editorial by FitzGerald et al. [1], which discussed the goal of achieving a 50% reduction in hospital admissions due to asthma over the next 5 yrs. However, successfully addressing this challenge requires an understanding of the complex nature of asthma. Our evolving understanding of asthma shows it to be a heterogeneous state with numerous phenotypes influenced by many aggravating factors. All these factors will need addressing to meet the GINA Asthma Challenge effectively.
We recently assessed asthma admission at Southampton General Hospital (Southampton, UK), focusing on the annual burden of repeated asthma admissions and their relation to aggravating comorbidities. Our findings may prove informative to meeting the GINA Asthma Challenge.
We systematically searched the hospital database for patients who had been acutely admitted on two or more occasions in 2010 for asthma at Southampton General Hospital. Data were collected retrospectively and covered patient demographics, admission details, asthma severity, and physical and psychiatric comorbidity. A diagnosis of psychiatric disease was made if the patient was on antidepressant medication, had a diagnosis documented in their general practitioner’s records or had evidence of care under a psychiatrist. A clinical diagnosis of vocal cord dysfunction was made based on clinical history and examination findings. A clinical diagnosis of dysfunctional breathing was based on a combination of clinical history, examination findings and Nijmegen score. Where available, data were collected to characterise disease severity including baseline spirometry, eosinophil counts and immunoglobulin E. Coding data for each admission were analysed to determine admission costs. Data were analysed using SPSS (version 19.0; IBM, Armonk, NY, USA).
Our findings showed there were 396 admissions for acute asthma in 2010, involving 305 patients. Of these, 36 (11.8%) patients were admitted on two or more occasions, accounting for 32.1% of admissions. Several of these patients were known to our Difficult Airways Clinic (Southampton General Hospital) and under specialist surveillance for their asthma. Repeated-admission patients consumed 895 bed-days and were predominantly female (72.2%; p=0.012). They commonly had aggravating comorbidities, the most predominant being diagnosed psychiatric disease (69.4%; p=0.03). Those patients with psychiatric comorbidity showed significantly higher body mass index (BMI) (p=0.012), and greater prevalence of obesity (p=0.05) and dysfunctional breathing (p=0.012) than patients without psychiatric comorbidity. They also showed trends for higher prevalence of other aggravating comorbidity such as gastro-oesophageal reflux disease (p=0.07) and for greater median bed-days/length of stay. The annual cost for repeated asthma admission was £226,536 of which patients with psychiatric comorbidity consumed £164,660 (72.7% of costs).
These findings support a growing awareness of the impact of psychological comorbidity on asthma. The relationship between asthma and psychological comorbidity is not clearly understood. Psychological comorbidity may lead to asthma or may be the result of living with a chronic disease. Lietzen et al. [2] found that greater exposure to stressful life events predicted the onset of asthma in a population-based cohort study whereas Bosley et al. [3] studied compliance and psychiatric disease and found higher rates of depression in patients who were not compliant with their inhaled asthma therapies. Research is needed into the efficacy of addressing psychological comorbidity in asthma populations.
The patients with repeated admissions in our study were predominantly female and had a higher prevalence of obesity. This group may be synonymous with a specific group identified in recent cluster analysis studies. Moore et al. [4] identified a group of older female patients (Cluster 3) with raised BMI, late-onset asthma, high healthcare utilisation and daily symptoms out of proportion to the degree of airflow obstruction demonstrated. Haldar et al. [5] also describe a phenotype (Cluster 2) that was predominantly female, obese and nonatopic. Our data suggest that this relatively small asthma phenotype may be responsible for a high number of asthma admissions. Addressing the needs of this group may help reduce their asthma admission rates.
In conclusion, we suggest that to meet the GINA Asthma Challenge, respiratory specialists need to understand and recognise factors that influence asthma hospital admission. Proactively addressing factors such as psychological comorbidity along with inter-related problems such as dysfunctional breathing and obesity may offer useful strategies to achieve that in the frequently admitted population. Further research in this area is indicated.
Footnotes
Statement of Interest
None declared.
- ©ERS 2012