Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) and bronchiectasis in adults

  • COPD, bronchiectasis and some persistent asthma can exist together in one person (overlap syndrome)
  • Diagnosis — clinical history, physical examination, lung function tests (spirometry), x-ray, CT scan

First assessment

Ask

  • Smoking — how many, how long, tried to stop, want to stop
  • Petrol sniffing — past or present — causes lung damage
  • Chronic cough, frequent chest infections
  • Sputum — frequency, amount, colour, blood
  • Shortness of breath — does it stop them doing usual physical activities or work
  • Activities of daily living, quality of life
  • Sleeping problems — snoring, stopping breathing, morning headaches, fatigue, daytime sleepiness

Check

  • Calculate REWS — AVPU, RR, O2 sats, pulse, BP, Temp
  • Weight, BGL 

Do

  • Collect blood for FBC 
  • Show person how to use puffer and spacer or other device as needed
  • Spirometry — before and 15 minutes after salbutamol puffer with spacer — 100microgram/dose (4 puffs) 30 seconds apart
    • Good response after reliever (FEV1 improves by more than 12% AND at least 200mL) usually means at least a component of asthma or reversibility
    • If improvement of more than 400mL — asthma COPD overlap or asthma only likely
    • In bronchiectasis — lung function may be normal, may show obstruction or restriction (FVC reduced, FEV1 normal or reduced, FEV1/FVC ratio 0.7 or more)
  • If severe airflow obstruction OR shortness of breath worse than expected from spirometry — consider referral for echocardiogram to check for heart failure, pulmonary hypertension
  • Medical consult
    • If blood in sputum or diagnosis if not known
    • For chest x-ray — look for bronchiectasis, emphysema, over-inflated lung, heart enlargement, heart failure, scarring from lung disease or old infection, malignancy
    • If you suspect bronchiectasis — may need high resolution CT scan of chest
    • If snoring, morning headache, daytime sleepiness, fatigue — see Breathing related sleep disorders 
    • If O2 sats less than 92% on room air when well or FEV1 less than 40% of predicted — consider home oxygen, may need extra oxygen for air travel

Table 7.22 Comparison of chronic lung diseases

Management of all chronic lung diseases

Aim is to improve symptoms and slow worsening of lung function

  • Do regular checks
  • Consider referral for pulmonary rehabilitation 
  • Make management/action plan with person and give them a copy
    • Include — self-management, when to have regular checks, allied health and physician referrals, follow-up, what to do for acute episodes
  • In severe chronic lung disease — talk with person and family about
    • Treatment choices and going to hospital if they become unwell
    • Developing an Advance Care Plan to reflect their wishes 

Regular checks

Every six months

  • Calculate REWS — AVPU, RR, O2 sats, pulse, BP, Temp
  • Weight, BGL 

Yearly

  • Chronic disease check
  • Blood for FBC, sputum MC&S and AFB/mycobacterial culture for atypical mycobacteria — to help with management of acute episodes 
  • SpirometryFEV1 and FVC
  • Review and give person written copy of updated management/action plan

Do

  • Give immunisations
  • Encourage to QUIT smoking — proven to slow down lung damage and has many other advantages
  • Strongly encourage physical activity — develop tailored exercise program with allied health support
  • If bronchiectasis with productive cough or moderate-severe obstruction — consider referral to physiotherapy for techniques to help cough up sputum
  • If unintended weight loss — medical consult

If planning to use oral corticosteroids/prednisolone for more than 2 weeks

  • Treat for strongyloides every 3 months while on steroids
  • Mantoux test to assess for previous or latent TB and risk of reactivation — talk with PHU about interpretation of results and management
  • Hepatitis B serology — medical consult if HBsAg positive. If non-immune — immunise
  • Consider baseline and annual assessment of bone mineral density especially if expected to use for more than 3 months — may need calcium and vitamin D supplements
  • If Hb concentration increased and/or packed cell volume (PCV) on FBC consistently more than 0.56 (56%) — may need to reduce it by long term oxygen therapy or taking blood — specialist consult

COPD — chronic obstructive pulmonary disease

  • Airway obstruction not fully reversible
  • Consider COPD if over 35 years and current or ex-smoker, even if no symptoms
    • Long history of smoking is the most common cause of COPD BUT can have COPD if never smoked, especially if long exposure to second-hand smoke or environmental/occupational dust

Diagnosis based on spirometry

  • COPD (without asthma)
    • Poor response (FEV1 improves by less than 12% or 200mL) to inhaled salbutamol
    • FEV1/FVC ratio less than 0.7 or 70%
  • COPD with some reversibility/asthma
    • FEV1/FVC  ratio less than 0.7 or 70% when asthma (reversible airway obstruction) has been treated

Symptoms

  • Cough with sputum most days for several months at a time, over 2 or more years
  • Often worse cough in morning — amount of sputum can be small
  • May have wheeze

Table 7.23 Grading severity of COPD

Exacerbation (acute episode) of COPD

  • Looks and feels worse than usual
  • At least 2 of
    • Increased shortness of breath
    • Increased sputum production or cough
    • Change in colour of sputum — clear/white to yellow OR yellow to green

Do first — severe exacerbation

  • Sit person up — use wheelchair to move them
  • Give salbutamol nebulised as needed — 5mg
    • AND ipratropium nebulised as needed — 500microgram — can mix with salbutamol
  • Nebulisers have high risk of transmitting infection and should only be used if absolutely necessary. Wear full PPE
  • Continue oxygen 
    • Monitor O2 sats continuously by oximeter — aim to keep levels at 8892% 
    • Watch for drowsiness — may indicate CO2 retention (slowing of breathing)
  • Medical consult — consider hydrocortisone IV — 100mg, every 6 hours (qid)

Check

  • Calculate REWS — AVPU, RR, O2 sats, pulse, BP, Temp
  • Weight, BGL 
  • ECG if chest pain or history of heart disease 
  • Head-to-toe exam — with attention to level of respiratory distress 

Do — mild to moderate exacerbation

  • Sputum for MC&S
  • Give oxygen to target O2 sats 88–92% — monitor every 15 minutes
  • Give salbutamol puffer with spacer — 100microgram/dose (8–10 puffs), every 1–4 hours until responding
  • If symptoms not well controlled or severe — add ipratropium puffer with spacer — 21microgram/dose (4–6 puffs) as needed
  • Give prednisolone oral — adult 50mg, once a day for 5 days then review — do not give for more than 2 weeks
    • If person also has diabetes — may need extra blood glucose control medicine when taking prednisolone
  • If signs of infection — fever, change in colour of sputum
    • Regardless of sputum results — give amoxicillin oral — adult 1g, twice a day (bd) for 5 days
    • If allergy to penicillin — give doxycycline oral — adult 100mg, twice a day (bd) for 5 days (do not give if pregnant)

Medical consult if

  • Person needs more oxygen than by 28% venturi (air-entrainment) mask or 4L/min by nasal cannula or becoming sleepy — often needs to go to hospital
  • RR less than 12/min or more than 26/min after first dose of salbutamol
  • Not improving with treatment
  • Other medical problems — diabetes, heart disease, kidney disease
  • COPD is moderate or severe based on earlier spirometry
  • Using home oxygen
  • History of being in ICU for acute episodes especially if non-invasive ventilation or intubation needed

Ongoing management of COPD

May also have heart failure, ischaemic heart disease, RHD, asthma — consider these when person with chronic lung disease is very short of breath

  • Stepwise progression of medicines — Table 7.24
  • Adherence and inhaler technique should be checked regularly — after each acute episode and when considering progressing medicines

Severe disease

  • If O2 sats less than 92% on room air when well, clinical signs of pulmonary hypertension OR polycythaemia (haemoglobin level more than 170g/L)
    • Refer to specialist for blood gases, echocardiogram, assessment for home oxygen
  • May need oxygen if flying in plane or being transported in ambulance — include in management plan
    • If on home oxygen — increase flow rate by 2L/min when flying
  • Refer to allied health and palliative care for home assessment and support — bedding, wheelchair, respiratory education, advice on Advance Health Directive

Table 7.24 Progression of medicines for COPD

*See next page for information about inhaled steroids

Improved inhaled steroids

  • Improve lung function, quality of life and decrease the rate of moderate and severe exacerbations
  • ALSO increase the incidence of pneumonia, especially in patients with severe COPD and do not improve survival
    • Carefully weigh risks and benefits before adding an inhaled steroid
    • Stable patients with rare exacerbations should not be on an inhaled steroid — consider stopping
    • If no benefit after 6 months — consider stopping inhaled steroid
  • Patients with asthma/COPD overlap have to be treated with an inhaled steroid

Table 7.25   Medicine types and examples

Bronchiectasis

  • Widening of airways caused by severe or repeated infections that fail to clear away secretions
  • Specialist consult to check for underlying treatable cause
  • Diagnosis confirmed by HRCT scan
  • Consider bronchiectasis if
    • Chronic productive cough for longer than 8 weeks (despite treatment) in person under 35 years
    • Chest x-ray showing changes caused by infection persisting for more than 6 weeks
    • Spirometry may be normal or have reduced FEV1 and FVC together (restriction)
    • Chronic cough with daily sputum not responding to standard treatment
    • May have shortness of breath, wheeze, chest pain
    • May have haemoptysis (cough up blood)

Exacerbation (acute episode) of bronchiectasis

  • Increased cough, amount and darker yellow or green coloured sputum
  • Often wheezing, more short of breath, fever
  • May have haemoptysis (cough up blood) or chest pain

Check

  • Calculate age-appropriate REWS
    • Adult — AVPU, RR, O2 sats, pulse, BP, Temp
    • Child (less than 13 years) — AVPU, respiratory distress, RR, O2 sats, pulse, central capillary refill time, Temp
  • Weight, BGL
  • ECG if chest pain or history of heart disease 
  • Head-to-toe exam — with attention to level of respiratory distress, eg talking in single words or sentences
  • Past sputum results for sensitivities

Do 

  • Sputum for MC&S, check for blood
  • Give amoxicillin oral — adult 1g, twice a day (bd) for 14 days
    • OR doxycycline oral — adult 100mg, twice a day (bd) for 14 days
  • If allergy to penicillin — give doxycycline oral — adult 200mg, single dose
    • THEN doxycycline oral — adult 100mg, once a day for 13 days
    • If pregnant do not give doxycycline — medical consult
  • If rapid improvement and no resistant bacteria in sputum — can reduce antibiotics to 10 days
  • If no improvement — give antibiotics according to most recent sputum results
  • Chest physiotherapy — if history or symptoms of reflux. Avoid head down postural drainage
  • Reliever (eg salbutamol) may be helpful if person is wheezy

Medical consult if

  • Haemoptysis (coughing up blood)
  • Can't look after themselves at home — washing, toileting, dressing, eating
  • Very wheezy or previous diagnosis of co-existing asthma — may need prednisolone
  • Very unwell — may need to send to hospital. Treat according to most recent available sputum results
    • If no results available give ceftriaxone IV/IM — adult 2g, once a day
    • If positive Pseudomonas — give ciprofloxacin oral — adult 750mg, twice a day (bd) for 14 days
    • If allergy — medical consult

Ongoing management of bronchiectasis

  • Refer to physio for coughing techniques and aids to help removal of sputum, eg Accapella device,  PEP valve, flutter valve
  • Inhaled corticosteroids may help if a component of asthma OR COPD OR very wheezy
  • Medical/respiratory physician follow-up
    • To exclude secondary causes of bronchiectasis and develop management plan
    • If 3 or more acute episodes or 2 or more needing hospitalisation in last year 
    • If Pseudomonas aeruginosa isolated in sputum for first time 
    • For pulmonary rehabilitation