Abstract
Many patients with fibrosing interstitial lung disease (fILD) will need to use supplemental oxygen (O2) to maintain normoxia at some point in their illness. If it is not needed at the time of diagnosis, then if fILD progresses—or if a comorbid condition like pulmonary hypertension develops—O2will become necessary, often, initially, during exertion and all-too-often, eventually, at rest as well. But presumably, if all else remains stable, if fILD progression is halted or slowed, O2needs follow in parallel. Despite perceived or unnoticed benefits of O2, and prescribers’ good intentions to improve patients’ sense of well-being, patients with fILD generally view O2with frustration and fear, as it threatens their already-impaired quality of life. Because of how meaningful and impactful O2is to the lives of patients with fILD, ‘O2need’ is a critically important—and perhaps the most—patient-centred metric that should be considered for incorporation as an endpoint in therapeutic trials. It is unclear how this should be done, but in this paper, we offer some possible approaches that merit consideration.
Subject
Pulmonary and Respiratory Medicine