| Literature DB >> 30111344 |
Claire L Shovlin1,2, Elisabetta Buscarini3, Anette D Kjeldsen4, Hans Jurgen Mager5, Carlo Sabba6, Freya Droege7, Urban Geisthoff7,8, Sara Ugolini9, Sophie Dupuis-Girod10,11.
Abstract
Hereditary haemorrhagic telangiectasia (HHT) is a multisystemic vascular dysplasia that leads to nosebleeds, anaemia due to blood loss, and arteriovenous malformations (AVMs) in organs such as the lungs, liver and brain. HHT is estimated to affect 85,000 European citizens, but most health care providers have limited prior HHT exposure or training.Outcome Measures were developed and implemented by the HHT Working Group of the European Reference Network for Rare Vascular Diseases (VASCERN), in order to maximise the number of patients receiving good care. The measures specifically target areas where optimal management reduces morbidity and mortality in HHT patients, and were designed to be robust to emerging new evidence. Thresholds are the percentage of patients in particular settings who have been recommended screening, or provided with written advice. The 5 Outcome Measures cover (1) pulmonary AVM screening; (2) written nosebleed advice, (3) assessment of iron deficiency; (4) antibiotic prophylaxis prior to dental and surgical procedures for patients with pulmonary AVMs, and (5) written advice on pregnancy. They are not a blueprint for detailed HHT management, but are suitable for all clinicians to be aware of and implement.In summary, these 5 Outcome Measures provide metrics to identify healthcare providers of good care, and encourage care improvement by all healthcare providers.Entities:
Keywords: Anaemia; Antibiotic prophylaxis; Epistaxis; Iron deficiency; Nosebleeds; Pregnancy; Pulmonary arteriovenous malformations
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30111344 PMCID: PMC6094583 DOI: 10.1186/s13023-018-0850-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Orphanet J Rare Dis ISSN: 1750-1172 Impact factor: 4.123
The Curaçao Criteria
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| 3. | |
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The HHT diagnosis is definite if 3 criteria are present, possible or suspected if 2 criteria are present, and unlikely if fewer than 2 criteria are present. A pathogenic (null) sequence variant in ENG, ACVRL1 or SMAD4 also defines definite clinical HHT according to current understanding. A negative HHT gene test does not exclude HHT unless the gene variant causing HHT has been identified in another affected family member
HHT outcome measures
| Target Population | Estimated cases in Europe | Measure | Target threshold | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Measure 1} | All HHT- clinical or molecular diagnosis | 85,000 | Screen for pulmonary AVMs | ≥ 90% |
| Measure 2} | Receive nosebleed advice in writing | ≥ 90% | ||
| Measure 3} | Assessment of iron deficiency | ≥ 70% | ||
| Measure 4 | Pulmonary AVMs (+/− HHTa) | 196,000 | Receive written advice on antibiotic prophylaxis prior to dental and surgical procedures | 100% |
| Measure 5 | Pregnant women with pulmonary AVMs (+/− HHTa) | ~ 1000 | Receive written advice on PAVM/HHT pregnancies | 100% |
Prevalence estimates assume a European population of 510,000,000 (196,000 with HHT or PAVMs), 100,000 females with HHT or PAVMs; and an average of 1.6 children per woman accounting for 1.2 years pregnant in 84 years life expectancy. aPulmonary AVMs also occur outside HHT and are estimated to affect 1 in 2600 people [33]. HHT and non HHT-related pulmonary AVMs are currently managed in the same way