14 research outputs found
Tori and Annuli in 3-Manifolds
Johannson K. Tori and Annuli in 3-Manifolds. Bielefeld; 1975
Adherence to home spirometry among patients with IPF: results from the INMARK trial
International audienc
Home spirometry in patients with idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis: data from the INMARK trial
International audienceBackground - Data from the INMARK trial were used to investigate the feasibility and validity of home spirometry as a measure of lung function decline in patients with idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis (IPF). Methods - Subjects with IPF and preserved forced vital capacity (FVC) were randomised to receive nintedanib or placebo for 12â
weeks followed by open-label nintedanib for 40â
weeks. Clinic spirometry was conducted at baseline and weeks 4, 8, 12, 16, 20, 24, 36 and 52. Subjects were asked to perform home spirometry at least once a week and ideally daily. Correlations between home- and clinic-measured FVC and rates of change in FVC were assessed using Pearson correlation coefficients. Results - In total, 346 subjects were treated. Mean adherence to weekly home spirometry decreased over time but remained above 75% in every 4-week period. Over 52â
weeks, mean adherence was 86%. Variability in change from baseline in FVC was greater when measured by home rather than clinic spirometry. Strong correlations were observed between home- and clinic-measured FVC at all time-points (r=0.72-0.84), but correlations between home- and clinic-measured rates of change in FVC were weak (r=0.26 for rate of decline in FVC over 52â
weeks). Conclusion - Home spirometry was a feasible and valid measure of lung function in patients with IPF and preserved FVC, but estimates of the rate of FVC decline obtained using home spirometry were poorly correlated with those based on clinic spirometry