15 research outputs found
How GPs value guidelines applied to patients with multimorbidity: A qualitative study
Objectives: To explore and describe the value general practitioner (GPs) attribute to medical guidelines when they are applied to patients with multimorbidity, and to describe which benefits GPs experience from guideline adherence in these patients. Also, we aimed to identify limitations from guideline adherence in patients with multimorbidity, as perceived by GPs, and to describe their empirical solutions to manage these obstacles.
Design: Focus group study with purposive sampling of participants. Focus groups were guided by an experienced moderator who used an interview guide. Interviews were transcribed verbatim. Data analysis was performed by two researchers using the constant comparison analysis technique and field notes were used in the analysis. Data collection proceeded until saturation was reached.
Setting: Primary care, eastern part of The Netherlands. Participants: Dutch GPs, heterogeneous in age, sex and academic involvement.
Results: 25 GPs participated in five focus groups. GPs valued the guidance that guidelines provide, but experienced shortcomings when they were applied to patients with multimorbidity. Taking these patients’ personal circumstances into account was regarded as important, but it was impeded by a consistent focus on guideline adherence. Preventative measures were considered less appropriate in (elderly) patients with multimorbidity. Moreover, the applicability of guidelines in patients with multimorbidity was questioned. GPs’ extensive practical experience with managing multimorbidity resulted in several empirical solutions, for example, using their ‘common sense’ to respond to the perceived shortcomings.
Conclusions: GPs applying guidelines for patients with multimorbidity integrate patient-specific factors in their medical decisions, aiming for patient-centred solutions. Such integration of clinical experience and best evidence is required to practise evidence-based medicine. More
flexibility in pay-for-performance systems is needed to
facilitate this integration. Several improvements in
guideline reporting are necessary to enhance the
applicability of guidelines in patients with multimorbidity
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
Predictive value and utility of oral steroid testing for treatment of COPD in primary care: the COOPT study
Niels H Chavannes1,2, Tjard RJ Schermer3, Emiel FM Wouters4, Reinier P Akkermans3, Richard PN Dekhuijzen5, Jean WM Muris2, Chris van Weel3, Onno CP van Schayck21Department of Public Health and Primary Care, Leiden University Medical Center, The Netherlands; 2Caphri Research Institute, Department of General Practice, Maastricht University, The Netherlands; 3Department of Primary and Community Care, Radboud University Nijmegen Medical Center, The Netherlands; 4Department of Pulmonary Diseases, University Hospital Maastricht, The Netherlands; 5Department of Pulmonary Diseases, Radboud University Nijmegen Medical Center, The NetherlandsBackground: The oral prednisolone test is widely used to distinguish chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) patients who might benefit from inhaled steroid treatment. Previous studies used selected patient groups that did not represent the large COPD population in primary care.Methods: The study included smokers and exsmokers with chronic bronchitis or COPD from primary care, who underwent prednisolone testing (30 mg for 14 days) before randomization in a three-year follow-up randomized controlled trial (COOPT Study). Spirometry was performed before and after the test. Responders and nonresponders were classified according to international criteria. Effectiveness of inhaled fluticasone relative to placebo was compared in terms of health status (Chronic Respiratory Disease Questionnaire), exacerbations, and postbronchodilator forced expiratory volume in one second (FEV1), using repeated measurement analysis.Results: Two hundred eighty-six patients recruited from 44 primary care practices were randomized. Nine percent to 16% of the COPD population was classified as responder, depending on the international guideline criteria used. On average, responders did not reach the minimum clinically important difference in health status (0.29 points/year, P = 0.05), although a borderline significant effect of inhaled fluticasone was noted. Possible clinically relevant reductions in exacerbation rate (rate ratio 0.67) and FEV1 decline (39 mL/year) occurred in responders, but did not reach statistical significance.Conclusions: Oral steroid testing identifies a limited proportion of COPD patients, but does not reveal any clinically relevant benefit from inhaled steroid treatment on health status. No significant effects on exacerbation rate and lung function decline occurred.Keywords: COPD, primary care, oral steroid testing, prednisolone tes
The acute effect of cigarette smoking on the high-sensitivity CRP and fibrinogen biomarkers in chronic obstructive pulmonary disease patients
Item does not contain fulltextAim: The evidence on the acute effects of smoking on biomarkers is limited. Our aim was to study the acute effect of smoking on disease-related biomarkers. Methods: The acute effect of smoking on serum high sensitivity CRP (hs-CRP) and plasma fibrinogen and its association with disease severity was studied by challenging 31 chronic obstructive pulmonary disease patients with cigarette smoking and repeatedly measuring these biomarkers before and after smoking. Results: Fibrinogen and hs-CRP increased directly after smoking by 9.4 mg/dl (95% CI: 4.2-14.5) and 0.13 mg/l (95% CI: 0.03-0.23), respectively. Fibrinogen levels remained elevated after 35 min, whereas hs-CRP normalized. Pearson's correlation coefficient between the hs-CRP change and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease severity was 0.25 (p = 0.06). Conclusion: Fibrinogen and hs-CRP increased directly after smoking in the chronic obstructive pulmonary disease patients. Their association with disease risk and/or progression remains to be demonstrated
Patterns of inflammation and the use of reversibility testing in smokers with airway complaints
Abstract Background Although both smoking and respiratory complaints are very common, tools to improve diagnostic accuracy are scarce in primary care. This study aimed to reveal what inflammatory patterns prevail in clinically established diagnosis groups, and what factors are associated with eosinophilia. Method Induced sputum and blood plasma of 59 primary care patients with COPD (n = 17), asthma (n = 11), chronic bronchitis (CB, n = 14) and smokers with no respiratory complaints ('healthy smokers', n = 17) were collected, as well as lung function, smoking history and clinical work-up. Patterns of inflammatory markers per clinical diagnosis and factors associated with eosinophilia were analyzed by multiple regression analyses, the differences expressed in odds ratios (OR) with 95% confidence intervals. Results Multivariately, COPD was significantly associated with raised plasma-LBP (OR 1.2 [1.04–1.37]) and sTNF-R55 in sputum (OR 1.01 [1.001–1.01]), while HS expressed significantly lowered plasma-LBP (OR 0.8 [0.72–0.95]). Asthma was characterized by higher sputum eosinophilic counts (OR 1.3 [1.05–1.54]), while CB showed a significantly higher proportion of sputum lymphocytic counts (OR 1.5 [1.12–1.9]). Sputum eosinophilia was significantly associated with reversibility after adjusting for smoking, lung function, age, gender and allergy. Conclusion Patterns of inflammatory markers in a panel of blood plasma and sputum cells and mediators were discernable in clinical diagnosis groups of respiratory disease. COPD and so-called healthy smokers showed consistent opposite associations with plasma LBP, while chronic bronchitics showed relatively predominant lymphocytic inflammation compared to other diagnosis groups. Only sputum eosinophilia remained significantly associated with reversibility across the spectrum of respiratory disease in smokers with airway complaints.</p
Quality of routine spirometry tests in Dutch general practices
This is a full-length article of an abridged version published in print and originally published online first on 4 Nov 2009. Cite this version as: Br J Gen Pract 2009 DOI: 10.3399/bjgp09X473088 (abridged text, in print: Br J Gen Pract 2009; 59: 921–926).Background: Spirometry is an indispensable tool for diagnosis and monitoring of chronic airways disease in primary care. Aim: To establish the quality of routine spirometry tests in general practice, and explore associations between test quality and patient characteristics. Design of study: Analysis of routine spirometry test records. Setting: Fifteen general practices which had a working agreement with a local hospital pulmonary function laboratory for spirometry assessment regarding test quality and interpretation. Method: Spirometry tests were judged by a pulmonary function technician and a chest physician. Proportions of test adequacy were analysed using markers for manoeuvre acceptability and test reproducibility derived from the 1994 American Thoracic Society spirometry guideline. Associations between quality markers and age, sex, and severity of obstruction were examined using logistic regression. Results: Practices performed a mean of four (standard deviation = 2) spirometry tests per week; 1271 tests from 1091 adult patients were analysed; 96.4% (95% confidence interval [CI] = 95.6 to 97.2) of all tests consisted of ≥3 blows. With 60.6% of tests, forced expiratory time was the marker with the lowest acceptability rate. An overall 38.8% (95% CI = 36.0 to 41.6) of the tests met the acceptability as well as reproducibility criteria. Age, sex, and severity of obstruction were associated with test quality markers. Conclusion: The quality of routine spirometry tests was better than in previous reports from primary care research settings, but there is still substantial room for improvement. Sufficient duration of forced expiratory time is the quality marker with the highest rate of inadequacy. Primary care professionals should be aware of patient characteristics that may diminish the quality of their spirometry tests. Further research is needed to establish to what extent spirometry tests that are inadequate, according to stringent international expert criteria, result in incorrect clinical interpretations in general practice.Tjard RJ Schermer, Alan J Crockett, Patrick JP Poels, Jacob J van Dijke, Reinier P Akkermans, Hans F Vlek and Willem R Pieter