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This section is intended to offer patients a look at the
history of oxygen treatment and the evolution of oxygen
technology and equipment.
"From
Both Ends of a Stethoscope"
By Thomas L. Petty, MD
COPD Awareness began on the day that Tom Petty entered
the University
Colorado Medical School in 1954.
Dr. Tom takes us from his student days, through the
development of Long Term Oxygen Therapy (LTOT). He
introduces to some of his many patients and takes the
reader along on his adventures--including a brush with
foreign intrigue.
His own experiences as a patient serve as the basis of
the final chapters;
‘What Went Wrong With Medicine?’ and ‘How to Thrive and
Survive With
Medicine Today’.
To order a signed copy contact:
TLPdoc@aol.com Tel:
303.996.0868
Or send a check for $17.00 for a postpaid & signed copy
to:
Thomas L. Petty, MD
899 Logan St. Denver, CO 80203
Thursday, March 06, 2008
Breathing Easier Through the Years
Reimbursement and patient convenience drive oxygen
therapy's evolution.
By Robert McCoy, BS, RRT, FAARC
More than 225 years ago, English clergyman and chemist
Joseph Priestley
discovered oxygen by heating red mercuric oxide and
capturing a colorless
gas discharge. When he inhaled the gas he labeled "dephlogisticated
air,"
he noticed a "light and easy feeling."
"Who can tell but that in time this pure air may become
a fashionable
article in luxury?" he remarked.
That comment is not far from true, as people today use
oxygen for both
medical and recreational purposes.
However, it was only in 1922 that innovative storage and
delivery techniques enabled oxygen's use in medical
therapy. Alvin Barach, MD, was the first clinician to
systematically employ oxygen tents to treat bacterial
pneumonia. Oxygen delivery has evolved since then, with
the most dramatic changes occurring in the past two
decades. This article looks at the history of long-term
oxygen therapy and how it has become a medical necessity
for a growing number of patients. Already, approximately
one million patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary
disease currently receive supplemental
oxygen treatment.
Making oxygen
Clinicians have developed several other methods of
separating oxygen from the atmosphere since Priestly's
initial experiment. The two most common, liquefaction
and filtration, form the foundation for today's
long-term oxygen therapy. Cooling gas compounds to
a liquid state allows for the separation of the gases.
In this state, they have the most efficient storage
capability, which is why most gases used in volume
today are stored and transported in this manner.
Liquefied oxygen's expansion ratio of 860 to 1 has
opened new possibilities for the home oxygen patients'
benefit. Filtration, or pressure swing adsorption, is a
method gaining popularity because it allows for small
amounts of oxygen to be generated as needed.
Early hospital oxygen systems
Originally, hospitals used high-pressure compressed gas
cylinders to store oxygen. Large cylinders would be
moved to the patient's bedside for therapy, while
smaller cylinders were used to transport the patient
within the hospital for special procedures or
emergencies. When hospitals began using a piping system
to deliver oxygen to each patient's room, they retained
the large cylinders as a backup system in case the
piping failed. When patients moved home for long-term
oxygen therapy, they continued using large cylinders
until more sophisticated systems became available.
Improving portable oxygen delivery
In 1965, Thomas Petty, MD, Master FCCP, introduced
a new era of portable oxygen for long-term oxygen
therapy patients who had previously relied on compressed
gas cylinders. He worked with chemical and polymer
company, Union Carbide, to develop a small liquid oxygen
portable device that was paid for by the local Medicare
provider.
The weight-to-operating time ratio and greater storage
capacity of liquid oxygen (LOX) allowed for a lighter
system that would last approximately twice as long as
compressed gas systems. This has afforded patients
greater freedom to leave their homes and engage in
exercise and recreation. Hospitals that already had
replaced their piping system with liquid oxygen also
began using small LOX units for basic patient transport
because the lightweight, long-lasting portables could be
filled on site. Before long, cylinder manufacturers
tackled the reimbursement and competitive challenges
presented by the more agile LOX systems. They developed
aluminum cylinders, regulators, and carts to compete
with the weight efficiency and price of LOX systems.
Their new cylinder sizes and options changed as patients
pressed for lighter, easier-to-carry systems that
allowed for greater mobility during daily activities.
The arrival of concentrators
However, neither device could maintain a hold on the
home delivery market. In the late 1970s, home oxygen
concentrators began offering a more convenient method of
providing stationary oxygen. Concentrators did not need
regularly scheduled refills which reduced the provider's
expense of visiting homes to refill oxygen systems. And
while
compressed air cylinders still needed to be refilled,
they had a longer cycle time and remained less expensive
than LOX systems, which needed to be refilled
about every 10 days.
The race was on to see which system would win the battle
for LTOT in the home. Patients and physicians
often favored LOX portables because of their long
operating time and light weight, yet concentrators were
effective for stationary oxygen.
A turning point
Oxygen conserving devices revolutionized the home LTOT
competition by changing the oxygen delivery method from
flow-base to volume-base delivery. In the flow-base
method, flow is dependent on inspiratory time to provide
a prescribed amount of oxygen that varies with
respiratory rate. Volume delivery with a conserving
device can give the entire effective oxygen dose early
in the inspiratory cycle then turn off - which allows
the delivery of a specific oxygen dose to the patient's
airway. One of the first commercial conserving devices
was the reservoir cannula. This device increased the
oxygen storage around the patient's airway, allowing a
lower oxygen flow to accomplish the same oxygenation
goal as a higher setting. The next available piece of
equipment, the cryogenic intake system, was the first
electronic conserving device. This unit's liquid
portable technology made oxygen last three times longer
than it would have on the same continuous flow setting.
These oxygen conserving devices allowed compressed gas
cylinders to compete with LOX portables by efficiently
dosing oxygen and eliminating the wasted oxygen flowing
when a patient was not inhaling.
Equivalency claims bring confusion
Comparing these devices was complicated. Manufacturers
seeking physician, payer and Food and Drug
Administration approval claimed dose equivalency between
the systems. However, the settings on conserving devices
were similar but not the same as continuous flow system
settings. This circumstance created a great deal of
prescription dosage confusion. While one conserver set
on its second setting could dispense 16 mL of oxygen,
another conserver could release 32 mL of oxygen. No dose
volume standards existed for oxygen therapy so
manufacturers determined what they felt was equivalent.
Most often they used a lower-dose volume in order to
claim a higher saving ratio. This created confusion and
the perception that conserving devices did not work.
Two classes of conservers emerged based on market
demands for better equivalency. The less expensive
pneumatic conserver did not require batteries. It often
used a dual-lumen cannula, with one lumen to sense
inhalation and exhalation and the other channel to
delive flow. Electronic conservers controlled doses
better, yet were more expensive and required a power
source. While each method has been proven effective,
dosing
variability and other practical issues need to be
understood to ensure proper patient oxygenation.
Hybrid oxygen systems
The increase in the number of long-term oxygen therapy
patients and the subsequent economic pressure has
stimulated the development of new home oxygen systems.
The goal of therapy is to keep the patient out of the
hospital by maintaining effective blood oxygen levels
during all activities. This requires oxygen
systems flexible enough to meet patients' needs, yet
efficient enough to provide cost-effective care.
Pressure from payers, providers and patients have driven
new product development for home oxygen
therapy. Portable oxygen remains one of long-term oxygen
therapy's greatest challenges. The more active oxygen
therapy patients want light and long-lasting systems to
meet their exercise needs. Yet while refilling a
portable system is the greatest cost to the home care
provider, it as the payers' lowest reimbursement.
New hybrid options have been manufactured to address
this complex issue.
Home concentrators
Concentrators that fill compressed gas cylinders in the
home entered the market a few years ago. Models differ
between manufacturers, but the principles remain the
same. A concentrator generates oxygen then stores it as
compressed gas in the cylinder. Oxygen monitoring
equipment ensures the gas's purity. This allows patients
to refill cylinders themselves, and it saves the home
care provider from visiting patients' homes to exchange
cylinders.
Concentrators that fill LOX portables have just become
available for commercial use. Again, the concentrator
generates oxygen for the portable, but rather than
pressurizing the gas, the concentrator liquefies the
oxygen and trans-fills it to the portable. This allows
patients the advantage of both a light-weight and
long-term use portable.
Portable concentrators
After numerous clinician requests, manufacturers have
finally introduced portable oxygen concentrators. These
machines give patients the benefit of making oxygen
rather than storing it, which allows them to use
electricity to refill the concentrator when they travel
from home.
Those advantages are tempered by other constraints on
the system's operation. The portable oxygen
concentrators use the same technology as stationary
oxygen concentrators only in smaller sizes. That means
that the maximum oxygen product and dosing of the oxygen
differ by concentrator. Those two variables restrict the
system, as the concentrator cannot make more oxygen than
it was originally intended to produce. If the patient
increases the demand with a higher dose setting or
respiratory rate, either
delivered dose, oxygen purity, or both will decrease.
These limitations must be considered when prescribing
and monitoring patients on this system.
Patient preference
With all the new options for long-term oxygen therapy in
the home, the main issue with equipment is clinical
effectiveness. Many payers emphasize that the equipment
is not an end-point because of the significant
variability in patient outcomes. Despite technical
improvements, equipment remains merely a tool in the
hands of knowledgeable clinicians. Until today's
technology demonstrates measurable benefits, payers and
providers will continue to promote less-expensive
systems to control costs. Meanwhile, economics has
driven product development. People using long-term
oxygen therapy have become consumers rather than
patients. They demand features and benefits targeted
toward their preferences. For example, when a
lightweight, portable LOX system became available,
patients wanted this more expensive system even though
many distributors did not. Patients got what they wanted
by shopping for providers who carried the product. This
same force continues to impact the sale of portable
oxygen concentrators.
Looking to the future
The future of long-term oxygen therapy offers endless
possibilities. Oxygen delivery systems need to
address the dynamics of a patient's oxygen requirement.
An oxygen system with a feedback loop could monitor
patients' oxygen saturation and adjust to their oxygen
needs.
Earlier disease detection and oxygen prescription could
prevent the complications of chronic hypoxemia, which
would require systems able to be used during sleep,
exercise, and travel. Patients who want to use their
systems in public will need more practical
and fashionable systems to meet their clinical
requirement of oxygenation at all activity levels.
Economics will always be a concern in long-term oxygen
therapy, and oxygen must be provided in the most
efficient means possible. As Priestly stated, this pure
air may become a fashionable article in luxury.
Hopefully, it will continue to be an effective clinical
tool to keep patients out of the hospital and doing all
daily activities that they desire.
Robert McCoy, BS, RRT, FAARC, is the managing director
of Valley Inspired
Products Inc., of Apple Valley, Minn., and also manages
ValleyAire Home
Respiratory Services, Inc., a home medical
equipment provider of
respiratory products and services.
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