38 research outputs found
Asthma control cost-utility randomized trial evaluation (ACCURATE): the goals of asthma treatment
Contains fulltext :
97659.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)ABSTRACT: BACKGROUND: Despite the availability of effective therapies, asthma
remains a source of significant morbidity and use of health care resources. The
central research question of the ACCURATE trial is whether maximal doses of
(combination) therapy should be used for long periods in an attempt to achieve
complete control of all features of asthma. An additional question is whether
patients and society value the potential incremental benefit, if any,
sufficiently to concur with such a treatment approach. We assessed patient
preferences and cost-effectiveness of three treatment strategies aimed at
achieving different levels of clinical control: 1. sufficiently controlled asthma
2. strictly controlled asthma 3. strictly controlled asthma based on exhaled
nitric oxide as an additional disease marker DESIGN: 720 Patients with mild to
moderate persistent asthma from general practices with a practice nurse, age
18-50 yr, daily treatment with inhaled corticosteroids (more then 3 months usage
of inhaled corticosteroids in the previous year), will be identified via patient
registries of general practices in the Leiden, Nijmegen, and Amsterdam areas in
The Netherlands. The design is a 12-month cluster-randomised parallel trial with
40 general practices in each of the three arms. The patients will visit the
general practice at baseline, 3, 6, 9, and 12 months. At each planned and
unplanned visit to the general practice treatment will be adjusted with support
of an internet-based asthma monitoring system supervised by a central
coordinating specialist nurse. Patient preferences and utilities will be assessed
by questionnaire and interview. Data on asthma control, treatment step, adherence
to treatment, utilities and costs will be obtained every 3 months and at each
unplanned visit. Differences in societal costs (medication, other (health) care
and productivity) will be compared to differences in the number of limited
activity days and in quality adjusted life years (Dutch EQ5D, SF6D, e-TTO, VAS).
This is the first study to assess patient preferences and cost-effectiveness of
asthma treatment strategies driven by different target levels of asthma control.
Trial registration: Netherlands Trial Registration NTR1756
Strategies for measuring long-term control in atopic dermatitis trials: a systematic review
Background: Atopic dermatitis (AD) is a chronic inflammatory skin disease. There are no standardised methods for capturing long-term control of AD.
Objective: To identify how long-term control has been captured in published randomised controlled trials (RCTs). Resultswill initiate consensus discussions on how best to measure long-term control in the core outcome set for AD.
Methods: Systematic review of RCTs of AD treatments published between 2000 and 2013, with a follow-up period of â„3 months, at least one outcome measure recorded at â„3 time-points, full paper available, and published in English.
Results: 101/ 353 RCTs were eligible. Methods to capture long-term control included: repeated measurement of AD outcomes (92 RCTs; 91%), use of AD medication (29 RCTs; 28.7%); and AD flares/remissions (26 RCTs; 25.7%). Repeated measurements of AD outcomes were typically collected 3 to 5 times during a trial, but analysis methods often failed to make best use of the data. Time to first flare was most commonly for trials including flare data (21/52). Medication-use was recorded based on quantity, potency and frequency of application. Limitations: Included RCT data only
Conclusion: This review illustrates the difficulties in measuring long-term control, and points to the need for improved harmonization of outcomes
Inappropriate asthma therapy-a tale of two countries:a parallel population-based cohort study
Funding was received by Respiratory Effectiveness Group and University Lyon 1.Peer reviewedPublisher PD