| Literature DB >> 28715514 |
A Sachweh1, Y von Kodolitsch1, T Kölbel2, A Larena-Avellaneda2, S Wipper2, A M Bernhardt3, E Girdauskas3, C Detter3, H Reichenspurner3, C R Blankart4, E S Debus2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Guidelines summarize medical evidence, they identify the most efficient therapy under study conditions and recommend this therapy for use. The physician now has the challenge to translate a therapy that is efficient under laboratory conditions to a patient who is an individual person. To accomplish this task the physician has to make sure that (I) the ideal typical therapy is applicable and effective in this individual patient taking the special features into consideration, that (II) therapy is compliant with the norm including guidelines, laws and ethical requirements (conformity) and that (III) the therapy meets the patient's needs.Entities:
Keywords: Evidence based medicine; Individualized decision; Medical decision making; Optimization; Thoracoabdominal aortic aneurysm
Year: 2017 PMID: 28715514 PMCID: PMC5306190 DOI: 10.1007/s00772-017-0245-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Gefasschirurgie ISSN: 0948-7034
Definition of some terms of individualized medical strategy (IMS)
| Efficiency | The physical success of therapy under controlled study conditions |
| Effectiveness | The physical success of therapy for an individual patient under real world conditions |
| Conformity | The compliance of a therapy according to guidelines, laws and ethical issues |
| Needs orientation | A therapy that takes into account the (i) physical (ii) social and (iii) emotional needs of the patient |
| Optimization | Individual therapy success in three dimensions, effectiveness, conformity and needs orientation aimed at goal optimization, because maximum success in all three dimensions simultaneously is hardly possible |
| Strengths (S)a | The characteristics of a therapeutic option for maximizing the success of treatment in a (i) physical (ii) normative and (iii) emotional dimension |
| Weaknesses (W)a | The characteristics of a therapeutic option that are contrary to maximizing the success of treatment in a (i) physical (ii) normative and (iii) emotional dimension |
| Opportunities (O)a | The characteristics of an individual patient, which are promotive for maximizing the success of therapy in a (i) physical (ii) normative and (iii) emotional dimension |
| Threats (T)a | The characteristics of an individual patient, which are obstructive for maximizing the success of therapy in a (i) physical (ii) normative and (iii) emotional dimension |
aThese points are evaluated by the physician
Fig. 1Two forms of guideline-based therapy. Firstly, the evidence-based medicine uniform therapy is used to treat every patient according to the same medical standard and risks technical and ethical treatment failure [1]. Secondly, an individualized medical strategy attempts to achieve optimum adaptation of medical standards to individual patients using instruments such as I‑SWOT. Measured as the area of both triangles, therapy success in the three dimensions effectiveness, norm compliance and needs-oriented is greater in the individualized medical therapy (red triangle) than in the evidence-based medicine uniform approach (blue triangle)
Fig. 23 × 3 questions to optimize therapy from the patient’s point of view
Fig. 33 × 3 questions to maximize therapy from the physician’s point of view
Fig. 4I-SWOT matrix for the evaluation of therapy-related strengths and weaknesses in relation to the patient-related opportunities and threats for the success of treatment
Protection against rupture by asymptomatic TAAA: strengths-weaknesses matrix for elective therapeutic options
| Therapeutic options | Strengths (S) | Weakness (W) | |
|---|---|---|---|
| (A) | Conservative therapy | No restrictions for quality of life (S1) | No reliable protection against aortic rupture (W1) |
| (B) | Endovascular parallel techniques (chimney graft) | Prosthetic exclusion of TAAA (S3) | Risk of endoleaks, progression of aneurysm (W3) |
| (C) | Complete endovascular surgery (fenestrated and branched stent grafts) | Prosthetic exclusion of TAAA (S3) | Risk of endoleaks, progression of aneurysm (W3) |
| (D) | Hybrid operation (visceral debranching and aortic stent graft) | Prosthetic exclusion of TAAA (S3) | Risk of endoleaks, progression of aneurysm (W3) |
| (E) | Open TAAA operation | Complete resection of TAAA (S12) | Results depend on the surgeon (W10) |
CIN contrast-induced nephropathy, DAZH German Aortic Center of Hamburg, ICU intensive care unit, TAAA thoracoabdominal aortic aneurysm, TAAA I, II, III, IV, and V refer to the Crawford classification of TAAA
Explanatory notes: W4 Bypass or left subclavian artery transposition according to the guidelines [13]; W5 Hostile aortic landing zone (landing zone <2 cm, massive aortic calcification or thrombosis, “gothic aortic arch” anatomy), unsuitable aortic anatomy (aortic kinking, narrow vessel caliber, unfavourable aortic anatomy of outflow vessels), unsuitable access to vessels (calcification, kinking, simultaneous access from multiple vessels); W6 Stent migration, stent collapse (risk factors are small diameter of aortic landing zone, aggressive oversizing, narrow aortic curvature with “bird-beaking” configuration); W7 High radiation exposure, high contrast load with increased risk of allergic reactions, complications due to complex arterial access techniques, contrast-induced nephropathy (CIN) and dialysis with subsequent risk factors for CIN: diabetes mellitus, age > 75 years periprocedural volume depletion, heart failure, cirrhosis or nephrosis, arterial hypertension, proteinuria, pretreatment with nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs), initial intra-arterial injection of contrast medium [7]; W8 Risk of organ ischemia (stroke, paraparesis, paraplegia especially with endograft >15 cm in length), visceral ischemia, renal artery infarctions; W19 Thoracotomy with aortic clamping, extracorporeal circulation, and unilateral pulmonary ventilation; W20 Patients who generally fulfil at least three of the following criteria: chronic arterial hypertension, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease with FEV1 < 1.0, coronary heart disease with myocardial infarction, stenting or aortocoronary bypass, heart failure with LVEF < 35% and >NYHA I, chronic renal failure with creatinine 1.2 mg/dl, American Society of Anesthesiologists score (ASA) ≥ 3, pre-existing aortic operation with thoracotomy or infrarenal aortic prosthetic grafts [14]
Fig. 5Example of a standard DAHZ template for I‑SWOT for identification of an optimal individual therapeutic strategy for a TAAA