| Literature DB >> 17518999 |
Rob Horne1, David Price, Jen Cleland, Rui Costa, Donna Covey, Kevin Gruffydd-Jones, John Haughney, Svein Hoegh Henrichsen, Alan Kaplan, Arnulf Langhammer, Anders Østrem, Mike Thomas, Thys van der Molen, J Christian Virchow, Siân Williams.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Clinical trials show that asthma can be controlled in the majority of patients, but poorly controlled asthma still imposes a considerable burden. The level of asthma control achieved reflects the behaviour of both healthcare professionals and patients. A key challenge for healthcare professionals is to help patients to engage in self-management behaviours with optimal adherence to appropriate treatment. These issues are particularly relevant in primary care, where most asthma is managed. An international panel of experts invited by the International Primary Care Respiratory Group considered the evidence and discussed the implications for primary care practice. DISCUSSION: Causes of poor control: Clinical factors such as exposure to triggers and concomitant rhinitis are important but so are patient behavioural factors. Behaviours such as smoking and nonadherence may reduce the efficacy of treatment and patients' perceptions influence these behaviours. Perceptual barriers to adherence include doubting the need for treatment when symptoms are absent and concerns about potential adverse effects. Under-treatment may also be related to patients' underestimation of the significance of symptoms, and lack of awareness of achievable control. IMPLICATIONS: Three key implications for healthcare professionals emerged from the debate. First, the need for simple tools to assess asthma control. Two approaches considered were the monitoring of biometric markers of control and questionnaires to record patient-reported outcomes. Second, to understand the reasons for poor control for individual patients, identifying both clinical (e.g. rhinitis) and behavioural factors (e.g. smoking and nonadherence to treatment). Third was the need to incorporate, within asthma review, an assessment of patient perspectives including their goals and aspirations and to elicit their beliefs and concerns about asthma and its treatment. This can be used as a basis for agreement between the healthcare professional and patient on a predefined target regarding asthma control and a treatment plan to achieve this.Entities:
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Year: 2007 PMID: 17518999 PMCID: PMC1894634 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2466-7-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Pulm Med ISSN: 1471-2466 Impact factor: 3.317
Reasons for poor control
| Co-morbidity (e.g. rhinitis, COPD) |
| Severe therapy-resistant disease |
| Ongoing exposure to triggers (e.g. occupational asthma, pets, mite etc) |
| Inadequate assessment |
| Misdiagnosis |
| Inadequate treatment |
| Ineffective delivery of treatment (e.g. poor inhaler technique) |
| Limited treatment effectiveness (e.g. smoking interfering with steroid actions) |
| Inadequate use of action plans |
| Low patient and physician expectations |
| Low adherence with agreed asthma therapy |
| Functional and psychological problems affecting willingness to use therapy |
| Over-reliance on complementary/alternative treatment |
| Not attending medical consultations |
| Patients do not perceive symptoms as indicative of poor control |
Figure 1Patient and healthcare professional behaviour affects asthma control [10].
Figure 2Healthcare professional and patient perspectives of the occurrence of asthma symptoms [16].
Current methods used to imply level of asthma control
| Measure | Comments |
| Symptoms | Day, night, exercise-induced |
| Lung function | % predicted, % variability |
| Healthcare resource use | Rescue medication, oral steroids, emergency consultations, hospitalisation |
| Bronchial hyperreactivity | Not suitable for routine clinical use |
| Biomarkers | Sputum eosinophils, exhaled NO |
| Health status | Numerous questionnaires available |
Ideal features of a tool to assess asthma control
| Simple |
| Give a clear |
| Able to predict |
| Complementary to |
Criteria for selecting patient-based outcome measures [65]
| Criteria | Comments |
| Appropriateness | Match to the specific purpose and question to be addressed |
| Reliability | Reproducible and internally consistent |
| Validity | Measures what it purports to measure |
| Responsiveness | Sensitivity to changes of importance to patients |
| Precision | Number and accuracy of distinctions made by the instrument |
| Interpretability | How meaningful the scores are |
| Acceptability | How acceptable to the respondents |
| Feasibility | Effort, burden and disruption to staff and clinical care |