2022 Brazilian Thoracic Association recommendations for long-term home oxygen therapy.
Maria Vera Cruz de Oliveira CastellanoLuiz Fernando Ferreira PereiraPaulo Henrique Ramos FeitosaMarli Maria KnorstCarolina SalimMauri Monteiro RodriguesEloara Vieira Machado FerreiraRicardo Luiz de Menezes DuarteSônia Maria Pereira Guimarães Togeiro MouraLícia Zanol Lorencini StanzaniPedro Medeiros JúniorKarime Nadaf de Melo ScheliniLiana Sousa CoelhoThiago Lins Fagundes de SousaMarina Buarque de AlmeidaAlfonso Eduardo AlvarezPublished in: Jornal brasileiro de pneumologia : publicacao oficial da Sociedade Brasileira de Pneumologia e Tisilogia (2022)
Some chronic respiratory diseases can cause hypoxemia and, in such cases, long-term home oxygen therapy (LTOT) is indicated as a treatment option primarily to improve patient quality of life and life expectancy. Home oxygen has been used for more than 70 years, and support for LTOT is based on two studies from the 1980s that demonstrated that oxygen use improves survival in patients with COPD. There is evidence that LTOT has other beneficial effects such as improved cognitive function, improved exercise capacity, and reduced hospitalizations. LTOT is indicated in other respiratory diseases that cause hypoxemia, on the basis of the same criteria as those used for COPD. There has been an increase in the use of LTOT, probably because of increased life expectancy and a higher prevalence of chronic respiratory diseases, as well as greater availability of LTOT in the health care system. The first Brazilian Thoracic Association consensus statement on LTOT was published in 2000. Twenty-two years later, we present this updated version. This document is a nonsystematic review of the literature, conducted by pulmonologists who evaluated scientific evidence and international guidelines on LTOT in the various diseases that cause hypoxemia and in specific situations (i.e., exercise, sleep, and air travel). These recommendations, produced with a view to clinical practice, contain several charts with information on indications for LTOT, oxygen sources, accessories, strategies for improved efficiency and effectiveness, and recommendations for the safe use of LTOT, as well as a LTOT prescribing model.
Keyphrases
- clinical practice
- healthcare
- chronic obstructive pulmonary disease
- high intensity
- spinal cord
- primary care
- randomized controlled trial
- systematic review
- emergency department
- risk factors
- resistance training
- stem cells
- drinking water
- spinal cord injury
- health information
- depressive symptoms
- bone marrow
- social media
- psychometric properties
- adverse drug