| Literature DB >> 30355794 |
Tanja Schjødt Jørgensen1, Jens Jørgen Lykkegaard2, Annette Hansen2, Heidi Morsø Schrøder2, Betina Stampe2, Anne-Marie Tetsche Sweeney2, Bente Appel Esbensen2,3, Bianca Bech2, Katja Christensen2, Ellen Friis-Mikkelsen2, Henrik Røgind2, Tine Lundbak2, Peter C Taylor4, Ingemar F Petersson5, Eva Ejlersen Wæhrens1, Jakob Kjellberg6, Henrik Gudbergsen1, Lars Erik Kristensen1.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: The provision of healthcare for patients with inflammatory arthritis occurs in the context of somewhat conflicting targets, values and drivers. Therefore, there is a need for introducing 'value-based healthcare' defined as the value of patient relevant health outcomes in relation to costs. This term is a central part of tomorrow's healthcare sector, especially for rheumatic diseases, yet the transition is a huge challenge, as it will impact the development, delivery and assessment of healthcare. AIMS: The aim of this study is to compare medical and patient evaluated impact of the traditional settlement and financing production (DAGS) controlled healthcare setting with a value-based and patient-centred adjunctive to standard care. METHODS AND ANALYSIS: Patients with inflammatory arthritis receiving treatment in routine care at the outpatient clinics in the Capital Region of Denmark will prospectively and consecutively be enrolled in a Non-Intervention-Study framework providing a pragmatic value-based management model. A Danish reference cohort, used for comparison will be collected as part of routine clinical care. The enrolment period will be from 1 June 2018 until 31December 2023. Baseline and follow-up visits will be according to routine clinical care. Registry data will be obtained directly from patients and include personal, clinical and outcomes information. The study results will be reported in accordance with the STROBE statement. ETHICS AND DISSEMINATION: The study has been notified to the Danish Data Protection Agency and granted authorisation for the period June 2018 to January 2025 (pending). Informed consent will be obtained from all patients before enrolment in the study. The study is approved by the ethics committee, Capital Region of Denmark (H-18013158). Results of the study will be disseminated through publication in international peer-reviewed journals. © Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2018. Re-use permitted under CC BY-NC. No commercial re-use. See rights and permissions. Published by BMJ.Entities:
Keywords: health care management model; inflammatory arthritis; patient centred value; value-based health care
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30355794 PMCID: PMC6224730 DOI: 10.1136/bmjopen-2018-023915
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMJ Open ISSN: 2044-6055 Impact factor: 2.692
Figure 1The value pyramid in inflammatory disease management. Treating patients with inflammatory arthritis to target is the backbone in creating value. However, individual patient-identified concerns, barriers or problems should be defined by patients and be regarded as adjunctive targets to treat to fully manage the impact of a chronic disease.
Figure 2Illustrates the principles of the pragmatic value-based healthcare model. ACR, American College of Rheumatology response criteria; CRP, C reactive protein; DAS28, Disease Activity Score 28; EQ-5D, based on the VAS scoring in the five domains; HAQ, Health Assessment Questionnaire; VAS, visual analogue scale.
Examination and interview at baseline and follow-up (follow-up will be every 6 months)
| Demographics and disease-related characteristics (interview) | Baseline | Follow-ups |
| Sex (M/F), no. (%) | X | |
| Age (years) | X | |
| Diagnosis (eg, RA, PsA, AS) | X | |
| Disease duration (years) | X | |
| Smoking (current (average per week)/previous (average per week)/never) | X | |
| Alcohol consumption (no. per week) | X | |
| Diabetes (y/n) | X | |
| Cardiovascular disease (y/n) | X | |
| Dyslipidaemia (or treatment for this) (y/n) | X | |
| Mental disorder (depression, anxiety) (y/n) | X | |
| Medication | ||
| Use of mild analgesics including NSAIDs (days per month) | X | X |
| Cumulated dose of oral prednisolone during the last month (mg) | X | X |
| Medication history (current and previous csDMARDs and bDMARDs) | X | X |
| Interval (days) between study baseline visit and initiation of new treatment | X | X |
| Date for treatment termination of new drug | X | X |
| Reason for withdrawal of treatment during the study period (lack of effect, adverse events, other) | X | X |
| Clinical examination | ||
| VAS physician (0–100 mm) | X | X |
| Height (cm) | X | |
| Weight (kg) | X | |
| Swollen joint count (0–28) | X | X |
| Tender joint count (0–28) | X | X |
| Manual tender point examination (no), only scores≥2 are interpreted as a tender point | X | X |
| Spondyloarthritis Research Consortium of Canada enthesitis score (SPARCC) (xx-xx) | X | X |
| Patient-reported outcomes (PROs) | ||
| EQ-5D; VAS pain (0–100 mm) | X | X |
| VAS Health (0–100 mm) | X | X |
| VAS Well-being (0–100 mm) | X | X |
| Multi-Dimensional Health Assessment Questionnaire disability index (MD-HAQ, including visual analogue scale for pain and global) (0–3) | X | X |
| PainDETECT Questionnaire (PDQ) | X | X |
| Personal factors and coping | X | X |
| VAS pain (0–100 mm) | X | X |
| VAS global (0–100 mm) | X | X |
| VAS fatigue (0–100 mm) | X | X |
| Patient Prioritised Problem Identification (PPPI) Questionnaire Symptom interference with pain (0–10). Symptom interference with fatigue (0–10). Symptom interference with social participation (0–10). Symptom interference with working ability (0–10). Symptom interference with ADL (0–10). | X | X |
| Transition Questionnaire score (Trans-Q) | X | X |
| Imaging and blood sampling as per routine care |
ADL, activities of daily living; AS, ankylosing spondylitis; bDMARD, biological DMARD; csDMARD, conventional synthetic DMARD; DMARD, disease modifying anti rheumatic drugs; EQ-5D, based on the VAS scoring in the five domains; NSAIDs, Nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs; PsA, psoriatic arthritis; RA, rheumatoid arthritis; VAS, visual analogue scale.
Outcome measures assessed at follow-up baseline
| Composite outcomes | ACR20/50/70 (at least 20%/50%/70% improvement in ACR response criteria) |
| Clinical outcomes | Δ No. of tender and swollen joints |
| Patient-reported outcomes | Δ VAS-fatigue, Δ VAS-pain, pain detect score, Δ Patient VAS-global |
ACR, American College of Rheumatology response criteria; CDAI, Clinical Disease Activity Index; CRP, C reactive protein; DAS28, Disease Activity Score 28; EQ-5D, based on the VAS scoring in the five domains; HAQ-MD Multi-Dimensional Health Assessment Questionnaire disability index (including visual analogue scale for pain and global); Trans-Q, Transition score; VAS, visual analogue scale.