TY - JOUR T1 - Real-life burden of hospitalisations due to COPD exacerbations in Spain JF - ERJ Open Research JO - erjor DO - 10.1183/23120541.00141-2022 VL - 8 IS - 3 SP - 00141-2022 AU - José Luis Izquierdo AU - José Miguel Rodríguez AU - Carlos Almonacid AU - María Benavent AU - Ramón Arroyo-Espliguero AU - Alvar Agustí Y1 - 2022/07/01 UR - http://openres.ersjournals.com/content/8/3/00141-2022.abstract N2 - Background Patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) often suffer episodes of exacerbation of symptoms (ECOPD) that may eventually require hospitalisation due to several, often overlapping, causes. We aimed to analyse the characteristics of patients hospitalised because of ECOPD in a real-life setting using a “big data” approach.Methods The study population included all patients over 40 years old with a diagnosis of COPD (n=69 359; prevalence 3.72%) registered from 1 January 2011 to 1 March 2020 in the database of the public healthcare service (SESCAM) of Castilla-La Mancha (Spain) (n=1 863 759 subjects). We used natural language processing (Savana Manager version 3.0) to identify those who were hospitalised during this period for any cause, including ECOPD.Results During the study 26 453 COPD patients (38.1%) were hospitalised (at least once). Main diagnoses at discharge were respiratory infection (51%), heart failure (38%) or pneumonia (19%). ECOPD was the main diagnosis at discharge (or hospital death) in 8331 patients (12.0% of the entire COPD population and 31.5% of those hospitalised). In-hospital ECOPD-related mortality rate was 3.11%. These patients were hospitalised 2.36 times per patient, with a mean hospital stay of 6.1 days. Heart failure was the most frequent comorbidity in patients hospitalised because of ECOPD (52.6%).Conclusions This analysis shows that, in a real-life setting, ECOPD hospitalisations are prevalent, complex (particularly in relation to heart failure), repetitive and associated with significant in-hospital mortality.In a real-life setting, COPD hospitalisations are prevalent, complex (particularly in relation to heart failure), repetitive and associated with significant in-hospital mortality https://bit.ly/3zCP2ZC ER -