| Literature DB >> 26208442 |
Licia Maria Henrique da Mota1, Claiton Viegas Brenol2, Penelope Palominos3, Geraldo da Rocha Castelar Pinheiro4.
Abstract
The generalization of the early rheumatoid arthritis (ERA) concept and the existence of a window of therapeutic opportunity-a time span in which the institution of a proper therapeutic method for the disease would determine clinical improvement-have set the notion that early diagnosis and treatment may modify the course of the disease. Although in several regions of the world, especially in North America and Europe, since the year 2000, a significant reduction in diagnostic delay was observed in cohorts of patients with rheumatoid arthritis (RA), probably reflecting a stronger awareness of the importance of early diagnosis, this is not a reality in Latin America (LA). LA is a region of great economic inequality, with disparities in access to the public healthcare system and limited access to private medicine, being widely difficult to obtain a specialized medical evaluation in both scenarios. This paper aims to briefly review the main difficulties in the management of ERA in LA, based on the review of the literature, on the evaluation of a survey conducted among 214 rheumatologists of LA, members of Pan-American League of Associations for Rheumatology (PANLAR) and the experience of the authors. The paper also aims to propose solutions to the difficulties in managing ERA in LA.Entities:
Keywords: Difficulties; Early; Inequality; Latin America; Rheumatoid arthritis; Solutions
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26208442 PMCID: PMC4617839 DOI: 10.1007/s10067-015-3015-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Rheumatol ISSN: 0770-3198 Impact factor: 2.980
Summary of the responses of rheumatologists to multiple-choice questions to know the panorama of the difficulties relating to the management of ERA in LA
| Early rheumatoid arthritis scenario in Latino America | ||
|---|---|---|
| Questions | Answers |
|
| In there any ERA or early arthritis clinic in your practice? | Yes—there is ERA clinic | 27 (13.24) |
| Yes—there is early arthritis clinic | 41 (20.10) | |
| No | 136 (66.7) | |
| If the answer to the first question is negative, where ERA or early arthritis patients are evaluated? | In established RA clinic | 37 (52.9) |
| Other | 53 (38.41) | |
| If the answer to the first question is positive, how long does it exist? | <1 year | 10 (13.7) |
| Between 1 to 3 years | 22 (13.14) | |
| Between 3 to 5 years | 17 (23.29) | |
| Between 5 to 10 years | 20 (27.4) | |
| More than 10 years | 4 (5.48) | |
| To be considered ERA, how long symptoms need to be present? | Less than 12 weeks | 81 (41.75) |
| Less than 1 year | 90 (46.39) | |
| Less than 2 years | 23 (11.86) | |
| Less than 3 years | 0 (0) | |
| In your practice, do you use any classification criteria for diagnosis of ERA? | No | 22 (11.06) |
| Yes, American College of Rheumatology (ACR) 1987 criteria | 8 (4.02) | |
| Yes, ACR/EULAR 2000 criteria | 166 (83.42) | |
| Other | 3 (1.51) | |
| In your outpatient care, how many patients are you following with ERA? | Less than 50 patients | 80 (48.78) |
| Between 50 and 100 patients | 55 (33.54) | |
| Between 100 and 200 patients | 17 (10.37) | |
| More than 200 patients | 12 (7.32) | |
| How many professionals work in the ERA clinic? | Professors | 32 (17.58) |
| Rheumatologists | 171 (93.96) | |
| Residents | 77 (42.31) | |
| Physicians (not rheumatologists) | 20 (10.99) | |
| Nurses | 38 (20.88) | |
| Occupational therapists | 31 (17.03) | |
| Administrative staff | 25 (13.74) | |
| Other | 30 (16.48) | |
| How is the access of the patients to ERA clinic? | Free access | 95 (48.47) |
| Referral by general practitioners | 122 (62.24) | |
| Referral by rheumatologists | 29 (14.80) | |
| More than one above | 52 (26.53) | |
| Other | 8 (4.08) | |
| Is there any endemic disease in your country important for differential diagnosis of RA? | Yes | 31 (15.35) |
| No | 171 (84.65) | |
| What composite score do you use in your practice? | DAS28 | 192 (94.58) |
| HAQ | 116 (57.14) | |
| SDAI | 27 (13.30) | |
| CDAI | 54 (26.60) | |
| None | 5 (2.46) | |
| Other | 12 (5.91) | |
| -What questionnaire of quality of life do you use in your practice? | HAQ | 179 (90.40) |
| MHAQ | 13 (6.57) | |
| RAPID | 25 (12.63) | |
| Other | 8 (5.05) | |
| What kind of treatment patients are using in your practice? | Glucocorticoids | 105 (51) |
| Non steroidal anti-inflammatories | 125 (61) | |
| Synthetic DMARDs | 179 (87) | |
| Biologic DMARDs | 20 (10) | |
| How often do patients with ERA visit the physician? | Once in a month | 57 (29.23) |
| Every 3 months | 99 (50.77) | |
| Every 6 months | 12 (6.15) | |
| Once in a year | 4 (2.05) | |
| Other | 23 (11.79) | |
The importance of early diagnosis of rheumatoid arthritis—current reality, challenges, and proposed solutions
| Current reality | Challenges | Proposed solutions |
|---|---|---|
| - There are few structured clinics for screening (capitation?) and follow-up of patients in the early phase of arthritis or RA | Creation/establishment of clinics with appropriate structure to receive early on, diagnose and treat early arthritis, both in public or private services | - Establishment of guidelines (and guides) for the implementation of early arthritis clinics in each service (by the local rheumatology associations basing themselves on successful experiences on the region itself) |
| - Lack of medical professionals (rheumatologists) on the existing clinics | - Allocate rheumatologist to outpatient early arthritis or early rheumatoid arthritis clinics | - Establish healthcare policies, on public and private services, that recognize the importance of allocating rheumatologists in reference units to diagnose and follow-up on early arthritis; |
| - Shortage of other healthcare professionals (nurses, occupational therapists, physiotherapists, physical educators, psychologists, social workers, nutritionist) and supporting staff (secretaries) at the existing clinics | - Designate healthcare professionals of correlate areas for the care of patients with early arthritis or early RA | - Establishment, on RA patients’ follow-up protocols, of the importance of multidisciplinary follow-up |
| - Patients’ difficulty of access to arthritis clinics or early arthritis clinics, both on public and private services | - Optimize patients’ access to reference centers for diagnosis and treatment of early RA | - Educational campaigns for the patient (information on the alert symptoms of RA and on the importance of the early diagnosis/treatment) |
| -- Difficulties to diagnose RA | - Broaden the access to additional tests eventually necessary for the differential diagnosis, both on public and private healthcare services | - Establishment of local protocols (regional associations of rheumatology, hospital services protocols) for early diagnosis of RA |
| - Difficulties for the differential diagnosis: | - Broaden the access to additional tests and image exams eventually necessary for the differential diagnosis, both on public and private healthcare services | - Inclusion of possible endemic-epidemic diseases on Latin America as possible differential diagnosis for the initial arthritis cases |
| - Non application or non existence of protocols for treating early RA | - Dissemination and application of the existing protocols, or creation of regional protocols for treating early RA | - Many of the existing protocols and guidelines, including the local Latin American associations’ protocols, already contemplate treatment for early RA, being necessary a greater dissemination of those among rheumatologists and correlated specialists. |
| - Difficulty to maintain an adequate periodicity between appointments due to lack of professionals and vacancies | - Implementation of circumstances that enable the creation of new vacancies on existing early arthritis clinics | - Establishment of an effective counter reference system for discharge of patients followed at early RA clinics |