| Literature DB >> 25329386 |
Nicola Magrini1, Giulio Formoso1, Oreste Capelli2, Emilio Maestri1, Francesco Nonino1, Barbara Paltrinieri1, Cinzia Del Giovane3, Claudio Voci1, Lucia Magnano1, Lisa Daya2, Anna Maria Marata1.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Information on benefits and risks of drugs is a key element affecting doctors' prescribing decisions. Outreach visits promoting independent information have proved moderately effective in changing prescribing behaviours.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25329386 PMCID: PMC4201458 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0109915
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Figure 1Flow-charts of the two cluster RCTs.
The main components of the multifaceted educational intervention.
| SETTING | bi-annual small group meetings (each lasting 3–4 hours) with a Primary Care Group (PCG) |
| TOOLS | ad hoc prepared information packages (pharmacists/referent GPs receive one three-day/half aday courses on the contents of that material); presentation and discussion of real life clinicalscenarios; prescribing reports for each PCG comparing with local averages |
| METHODS | educational outreach visits (small group meetings); audit & feedback; problem-based learning:“we present to you the available evidence and some context, you decide” |
| ACTORS | a pharmacist acts as facilitator, presenting the evidence-based information packages andcommenting on drug utilization data of PCG; a general practitioner acts as referent peerpresenting real life clinical scenarios to be discussed in the light of available evidence |
TEA trial: GPs’ mean baseline prescription (in the 3 months preceding the outreach visit) of drugs considered in the primary outcomes, expressed as DDD per 1000 patients.
| Drugs considered | Group 1: information on drugs for the treatmentof benign prostatic hyperplasia | Group 2: information on drugsfor the treatment of osteoporosis |
| finasteride | 5.35 | 5.46 |
| dutasteride | 4.09 | 4.30 |
| alfuzosin | 9.98 | 9.66 |
| terazosin | 4.64 | 4.73 |
| tamsulosin | 11.05 | 11.11 |
| alendronate | 7.35 | 7.29 |
| risedronate | 3.01 | 2.98 |
TEA trial: differences in DDD per 1000 patients of prescribed drugs (intervention vs control: 1605 included GPs).
| Absolute mean prescriptionduring follow-up in the ‘intervention group’ (DDD per 1000assisted population/day) | Absolute difference atfollow-up vs control group (change from baselineexpressed as DDD per 1000 assisted population/day) | Relative % variationvs control: m-ITT(95% CI) | |
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| |||
| finasteride+dutasteride | 6.61 | 0.24 | 3.6% (−2.9 to 10.2%) |
| alfuzosin vs tamsulosin +terazosin | 0.71 (ratio) | −0.06 | −8.5% (−16.9 to −0.7%) |
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| |||
| finasteride | 3.60 | 0.05 | 1.4% (−6.5 to 9.5%) |
| dutasteride | 3.00 | 0.18 | 5.8% (−2.6 to 14.3%) |
| alfuzosin | 6.82 | −0.11 | −1.7% (−8.9 to 5.6%) |
| tamsulosin | 7.92 | 0.28 | 3.7% (−3.1 to 10.4%) |
| terazosin | 3.21 | 0.17 | 5.4% (−4.1 to 14.6%) |
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| |||
| alendronate | 4.99 | <0.01 | 0.1% (−7.3 to 7.5%) |
| risedronate | 2.03 | −0.11 | −5.1% (−15.3 to 5.6%) |
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| |||
| ibandronate | 0.48 | −0.11 | −19.6% (−33.9 to −5.4%) |
| alendronate vs risedronate + ibandronate | 2.89 (ratio) | 0.27 | 10.4% (−3.5 to 24.6%) |
| strontium ranelate | 0.59 | 0.03 | 4.8% (−12.9 to 21.0%) |
| raloxifene | 0.13 | <0.01 | 0.4% (−26.9 to 27.5%) |
| calcium | 1.83 | −0.11 | −5.4% (−15.6 to 5.4%) |
| vitamin D | 1.72 | −0.06 | −3.5% (−12.4 to 5.3%) |
56 physicians who had not prescribed tamsulosin or terazosin could not be included in the calculation since this is a ratio.
300 physicians who had not prescribed risedronate or ibandronate could not be included in the calculation since this is a ratio.
Figure 2% differences in primary outcomes at 6 months (main analysis), 12, 24 and 48 months.
SIDRO trial: GPs’ mean baseline prescription (in the 3 months preceding the outreach visit) of considered drugs, expressed as DDD per 1000 patients.
| Drugs considered: | Group 1: information on prulifloxacin | Group 2: information on barnidipine |
| prulifloxacin | 0.19 | 0.18 |
| barnidipine | 1.07 | 1.06 |
SIDRO trial: differences in DDD per 1000 patients of prescribed drugs (intervention vs control).
| prescribing outcomes(primary) | Absolute mean prescription duringfollow-up in the ‘intervention group’(DDD per 1000 patients) | Absolute difference at follow-up vscontrol group (change from baselineexpressed as DDD per 1000 patients | m-ITT (95% CI)(1564 included GPs) |
| prulifloxacin | 0.17 | −0.02 | −11.1% (−0.5 to −22,2%) |
| barnidipine | 1.94 | −0.21 | −9.8% (−1.9 to −18.2%) |
*a lower increase was observed in the intervention group.
Participants’ opinions about usefulness of information received (question: Do you think the information you have received will be useful?).
| Information package | Very much | Quite | Little | Not at all | No answer |
|
| 42.5% | 53.5% | 1.8% | 0.1% | 2.1% |
|
| 29.7% | 62.3% | 4.5% | 0.9% | 2.6% |
|
| 31.0% | 43.6% | 19.1% | 3.1% | 3.2% |
|
| 37.3% | 35.8% | 18.2% | 6.3% | 2.3% |