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Hospital readmissions following initiation of nebulized arformoterol tartrate or nebulized short-acting beta-agonists among inpatients treated for COPD

Authors Bollu V, Ernst FR, Karafilidis J, Rajagopalan K, Robinson SB, Braman SS

Received 6 August 2013

Accepted for publication 18 September 2013

Published 6 December 2013 Volume 2013:8 Pages 631—639

DOI https://doi.org/10.2147/COPD.S52557

Checked for plagiarism Yes

Review by Single anonymous peer review

Peer reviewer comments 3



Vamsi Bollu,1 Frank R Ernst,2 John Karafilidis,1 Krithika Rajagopalan,1 Scott B Robinson,2 Sidney S Braman3

1Sunovion Pharmaceuticals, Inc., Marlborough, MA, 2Premier healthcare alliance, Charlotte, NC, 3The Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, New York, NY, USA

Background: Inpatient admissions for chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) represent a significant economic burden, accounting for over half of direct medical costs. Reducing 30-day readmissions could save health care resources while improving patient care. Recently, the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act authorized reduced Medicare payments to hospitals with excess readmissions for acute myocardial infarction, heart failure, and pneumonia. Starting in October 2014, hospitals will also be penalized for excess COPD readmissions. This retrospective database study investigated whether use of arformoterol, a nebulized long-acting beta agonist, during an inpatient admission, had different 30-day all-cause readmission rates compared with treatment using nebulized short-acting beta agonists (SABAs, albuterol, or levalbuterol).
Methods: A US nationally representative hospital database was used to study adults aged ≥40 years, discharged between January, 2006 and March, 2010, and with a diagnosis of COPD. Patients receiving arformoterol on ≥80% of days following treatment initiation were compared with patients receiving a nebulized SABA during hospitalization. Arformoterol and nebulized SABA patients were matched (1:2) for age, sex, severity of inpatient admission, and primary/secondary COPD diagnosis. Logistic regression compared the odds of readmission while adjusting for age, sex, race, admission type, severity, primary/secondary diagnosis, other respiratory medication use, respiratory therapy use, oxygen use, hospital size, and teaching status.
Results: This retrospective study compared 812 arformoterol patients and 1,651 nebulized SABA patients who were discharged from their initial COPD hospital admission. An intensive care unit stay was more common among arformoterol patients (32.1% versus 18.4%, P<0.001), suggesting more severe symptoms during the initial admission. The observed readmission rate was significantly lower for arformoterol patients than for nebulized SABA patients (8.7% versus 11.9%, P=0.017), as were the adjusted odds of readmission (odds ratio 0.69, 95% confidence interval 0.51–0.92).
Conclusion: All-cause 30-day readmission rates were significantly lower for arformoterol patients than nebulized SABA patients, both before and after adjusting for patient and hospital characteristics.

Keywords: patient readmission, case-control studies, adrenergic β2 receptor agonists, comparative effectiveness research

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