M27 Bronchiectasis multicentre cohort; baseline demographics from BRONCHUK
2019
Bronchiectasis is increasingly recognised but poorly described. There is variability in aetiology, management and outcomes. We have adapted the EMBARC platform and created a multisite UK based registry with affiliated biobank. The BronchUK partnership (www.bronch.ac.uk) aimed to recruit 1500 adult patients with annual follow up over 3–5 years. We report our demographic data. Methods Multicentre recruitment (13 secondary care sites) with databasing of patient demographics. Data is quality assured on a routine basis. We followed the EMBARC protocol for data collection including Quality of Life Bronchiectasis (QOL-B) and SGRQ questionnaires. Results 1403 patients have been recruited. We report data on the first 813 with complete core datasets; 504 were female (62%), 309 male (38%). The mean age 65 years SD 12.6 (median is 67 IQR 61–73). Patients were predominantly Caucasian (93%). The majority were never smokers 478 (58.8%) or ex-smokers 304 (37.4%) with only 31 (3.8%) self-reporting current smoking. Morbidity was high; Cardiovascular disease was present in 234 (28.8%). 147 (18.1%) were hospitalised in the last year due to respiratory disease, 666 (81.9%) were not. Exacerbations were common with one – 144 (17.7%), Two – 144 (17.7%) three or more- 319 (39.3%). Only 206 (25.3%) reported no exacerbations in prior 12 months. Haemophilus influenzae was the most frequent organism isolated (19.1% of all patients/29.3% of patients producing baseline sputum). Pseudomonas was cultured in most recent sputum in 98 (12.1%) rising to 223 (27.4%) isolating Pseudomonas in the last 2 years. The mean BMI was 26.5 (22.3–29.3) and median, FEV1% predicted median 76.9 (59.1–95.1). The Bronchiectasis severity index (BSI) was - mild= 233 (29%), moderate= 391 (48%), severe= 189 (23%). Common aetiologies were idiopathic (40%) and post infectious (34%). COPD and Asthma were either common comorbidities or suspected aetiologies (16–21% and 3–39%) respectively. Conclusions The BronchUK registry has a broadly representative cohort of patients in terms of simple demographics (female predominant, Haemophilus infections, idiopathic/post infectious aetiologies) but the morbidity levels and hospitalisation rates are noteworthy. Long term follow up will help us ascertain which patients are at highest risk of poor outcomes. Acknowledgements MRC Funding grant MR/L011263/1, Recruiting sites and patients.
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