# Longer daily oxygen use associates with more adverse events, symptoms, and worse health status in long-term oxygen therapy

**Authors:** Filip Björklund, Magnus Ekström

PMC · DOI: 10.1177/14799731251366962 · Chronic Respiratory Disease · 2025-08-08

## TL;DR

Longer daily oxygen use in patients on long-term oxygen therapy is linked to more adverse events, worse symptoms, and poorer health status.

## Contribution

This study identifies associations between prolonged oxygen use and negative health outcomes in LTOT patients.

## Key findings

- Patients using oxygen 24 hours daily reported more adverse events and worse symptoms.
- Longer oxygen use correlated with higher dyspnea, anxiety, and worse health status in regression models.
- No link was found between oxygen use duration and sleep quality or duration.

## Abstract

Use of long-term oxygen therapy (LTOT) for more than 15 h per day does not reduce mortality or hospitalizations, but may increase the risk of adverse events. We evaluated the relationship between daily oxygen use duration and adverse events, symptoms, and health status in patients on LTOT.

This was a cross-sectional survey study of a random sample (N = 650) of adults with ongoing LTOT in Sweden. Oxygen use (h/day) was reported, and associations were analyzed with adverse events, symptom severities (revised Edmonton Symptom Assessment System), sleep duration and quality, and health status (COPD assessment test [CAT]).

In total, surveys from 204 patients were analyzed; 60% female, mean age 75.3 (SD 8.7) years. Swedevox baseline characteristics were similar between sampled respondents and non-respondents. Patients reporting 24 h of daily oxygen use (53.4%) also reported a higher number of total adverse events, higher ratings of dyspnea, depression and anxiety, and worse health status, compared to those reporting fewer hours of oxygen use. A longer daily duration of oxygen use also associated with a higher number of experienced adverse events, higher ratings of dyspnea and anxiety, and worse rated health status in crude and adjusted linear regression models. No associations were seen between oxygen use duration and sleep quality or duration.

More adverse events, a higher severity of some symptoms, and worse health status are seen among patients with a longer daily duration of oxygen use. Further research is needed to establish evidence of causality.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** dyspnea (MESH:D004417), anxiety (MESH:D001007), depression (MESH:D003866), COPD (MESH:D029424)
- **Chemicals:** Oxygen (MESH:D010100)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

30 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12334815/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12334815