RT Journal Article SR Electronic T1 Characterisation and impact of reported and unreported exacerbations: results from ATTAIN JF European Respiratory Journal JO Eur Respir J FD European Respiratory Society SP 1156 OP 1165 DO 10.1183/09031936.00038814 VO 44 IS 5 A1 Jones, Paul W. A1 Lamarca, Rosa A1 Chuecos, Ferran A1 Singh, Dave A1 Agustí, Alvar A1 Bateman, Eric D. A1 de Miquel, Gonzalo A1 Caracta, Cynthia A1 Garcia Gil, Esther YR 2014 UL https://publications.ersnet.org//content/44/5/1156.abstract AB The frequency and impact of exacerbations identified using healthcare resource utilisation (HCRU) or the EXAcerbations of Chronic pulmonary disease Tool (EXACT) were compared prospectively in a 24-week, phase III trial (ATTAIN). Patients with moderate-to-severe chronic obstructive pulmonary disease received twice-daily aclidinium 200 μg, aclidinium 400 μg or placebo. All HCRU events were reported to physicians. “EXACT-identified” events were categorised as “EXACT-reported” (detected by EXACT and reported to the physician) and “EXACT-unreported” (detected but not reported). Health status was measured using the St George’s Respiratory Questionnaire (SGRQ). Annualised EXACT-identified event rates were higher in all study arms (placebo 1.39, aclidinium 200 μg 1.00 and aclidinium 400 μg 0.98 per patient per year) versus HCRU (placebo 0.60, aclidinium 200 μg 0.43 and aclidinium 400 μg 0.40 per patient per year). Concordance between methods was low (kappa 0.16). Aclidinium reduced EXACT-identified events (rate ratio versus placebo: aclidinium 200 μg 0.72 and aclidinium 400 μg 0.71; both p<0.05); HCRU events were similarly reduced. At week 24, SGRQ scores improved (-6.6 versus baseline) in patients with no event during weeks 1–12; improvements were significantly smaller in patients with HCRU events (-3.4; p=0.036) or EXACT-unreported events (-3.0; p=0.002). Unreported events were more frequent than reported events. Both had similar negative impact on health status. Aclidinium reduced the frequency of both types of event. There are twice as many unreported exacerbation events as reported events; both have similar impact on health status http://ow.ly/AwJVf