COPD
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Frequent exacerbators of Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (COPD) is a distinct clinical phenotype characterised by systemic inflammation. Study objectives were to determine clinical outcomes of pulmonary rehabilitation in frequent exacerbators and the impact this has on the key surrogate markers of this phenotype. Eighty-five mild-very severe COPD patients (FEV1 pred, 52 ± 18%) were categorised as frequent (≥2 exacerbations per year, n = 50) or infrequent exacerbators (≤1 exacerbation per year, n = 35). ⋯ No significant reductions in CRP concentration (p = 0.937), neutrophil activation (CD11b, p = 0.553; CD62L, p = 0.070; CD66b, p = 0.317), or other neutrophil subsets (mature, p = 0.313; immature, p = 0.756; suppressive, p = 0.259) were observed. Frequent exacerbators of COPD were less likely to complete pulmonary rehabilitation, but those who complete experience similar benefits to infrequent exacerbators. Pulmonary rehabilitation may serve to have immune-modulatory properties for frequent exacerbators.