| Literature DB >> 30539541 |
Johanne Martel-Pelletier1, Emmanuel Maheu2, Jean-Pierre Pelletier1, Ludmila Alekseeva3, Ouafa Mkinsi4, Jaime Branco5, Pierre Monod6, Frédéric Planta7, Jean-Yves Reginster8,9, François Rannou10.
Abstract
BACKGROUND AND AIMS: Although osteoarthritis (OA) is managed mainly in primary care, general practitioners (GPs) are not always trained in its diagnosis, which leads to diagnostic delays, unnecessary resource utilization, and suboptimal patient outcomes.Entities:
Keywords: Care pathways; Consensus; Diagnosis; General practitioners; Hand; Hip; Knee; OA; Primary care; Specialist intervention thresholds
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30539541 PMCID: PMC6514162 DOI: 10.1007/s40520-018-1077-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Aging Clin Exp Res ISSN: 1594-0667 Impact factor: 3.636
Fig. 1Guidelines for the diagnostic management of hip pain in primary care. Explanatory terminology and acronyms: Abnormal pain: pain of an intensity or duration that is unusual for OA of the hip ; VAS score > 7 or duration longer than 10 days. RDC: rapidly destructive coxarthrosis or microfracture of the subchondral bone responsible for nocturnal pain and limping for which the only effective treatment is unloading body weight from the limb. Labral abnormalities: joint pain sometimes occurring with no radiographic or ultrasound abnormality, most common in young and/or athletic patients, requiring a specialist opinion. Situations requiring urgent expert opinion are denoted by red typeface
Fig. 2Guidelines for the diagnostic management of knee pain in primary care. Knee radiographs proposed in accordance with the French classification of procedures: anteroposterior weight-bearing, 0° and 30° flexion, profile and 30° flexion skyview (femoro-patellar view). Abnormal pain: pain of an intensity or duration that is unusual for OA of the knee; VAS score > 7 or duration longer than 10 days. Metabolic/inflammatory syndrome assessment: fasting glucose, investigation of an abnormal lipid profile, BMI/overweight, arterial hypertension. NSAIDs: non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs. Situations requiring urgent expert opinion are denoted by red typeface
Fig. 3Guidelines for the diagnostic management of hand/finger pain in primary care. IP: interphalangeal; MCP: metacarpophalangeal. Situations requiring urgent expert opinion are denoted by red typeface
| Q1 | Do you agree with the board’s statement that osteoarthritis is managed inefficiently in primary care? | A: YES |
| Q2 | If yes, do you agree that the way in which the disease is managed in primary care needs to be improved? | A: YES |
| Q3 | Do you agree that delayed management of osteoarthritis can represent a missed opportunity for the patient? | A: YES |
| Q4 | A simple and well-established procedure for GPs to apply would be useful to help them better manage osteoarthritis | A: TRUE |
| Q5 | Offering GPs a simple procedure to apply would reduce the prescription of unnecessary additional examinations? | A: TRUE |
| Q6 | The creation of osteoarthritis guidelines is based on the idea that not all patients with suspected osteoarthritis necessarily need to be seen by a specialist. Do you agree with this? | A: YES |
| Q7 | Do you agree with the fact that osteoarthritis of the spine has been excluded from these primary care guidelines? | A: YES |
| Q8 | Do you consider it relevant that the guidelines are focused on the three sites of the hip, knee and hands? | A: YES |
| Q9 | Do one or more of the three guidelines seem unnecessary to you? | A: YES |
| Q10 | Do you believe other osteoarthritis sites should be priorities in primary care patient management guidelines? | A: YES |
| Q11 | Are there any situations in which excluding the rheumatologist from the disease’s management could have a negative impact on the patient? | A: YES |
| Q12 | Do you agree with the proposed diagnosis criteria for GPs? | A: Yes |
| Q13 | If no, which criteria would you have proposed in order for GPs to perform an osteoarthritis diagnosis on one of the three sites? | Open answer |
| Q14 | Once osteoarthritis has been diagnosed on one of the three sites, would you consider it essential for the patient to receive a specialist assessment by a rheumatologist? | A: YES |
| Q15 | If yes, what should this assessment include? | Open answer |
| Q16 | If no, are there any situations in which a specialist assessment would be necessary? (other than the alert situations described in the guidelines) | Open answer |
| Q17 | For surgical osteoarthritis, who do you believe would be the best placed practitioner to manage the patient? | A: The GP |
| Q18 | For osteoarthritis requiring medical treatment, who do you believe would be the best placed practitioner to manage the patient? | A: The GP |
| Q19 | In your opinion, which of the following statements is most accurate | |
| For newly diagnosed osteoarthritis, a rheumatologist’s opinion is essential | A | |
| For newly diagnosed osteoarthritis, a rheumatologist’s opinion would be useful, only in a complex situation or if treatment fails | B | |
| Except in specific situations, osteoarthritis should be treated exclusively by a GP | C |
| Q20 | On the whole, the procedure is logical | YES |
| Q21 | On the whole, the procedure is easy to understand | A: YES |
| Q22 | The red flags are useful for this indication | A: YES |
| Q23 | I believe other red flags would be useful | A: YES |
| Q24 | The intervention threshold between the GP and the specialist seems well positioned | A: YES |
| Q25 | Only offering a plain radiograph to investigate hip pain in primary care seems appropriate | A: YES |
| Q26 | If you answered NO to question 25, what further investigations would you advise | Open answer |
| Q27 | Would you say then that this proposed procedure for osteoarthritis of the hip is | |
| Sufficient for GPs | A | |
| Goes too far for GPs | B | |
| Does not go far enough for GPs | C | |
| Q28 | Do you have any comments on this procedure for managing osteoarthritis of the hip? |
| Q29 | On the whole, the procedure is logical | A: YES |
| Q30 | On the whole, the procedure is easy to understand | A: YES |
| Q31 | The red flags are useful for this indication | A: YES |
| Q32 | I believe other red flags would be useful | A: YES |
| Q33 | The intervention threshold between the GP and the specialist seems well positioned | A: YES |
| Q34 | Only offering a plain radiograph to investigate knee pain in primary care seems appropriate | A: YES |
| Q35 | If you answered NO to question 34, what further investigations would you advise a GP to perform? | Open answer |
| Q36 | Would you say then that this proposed procedure for osteoarthritis of the knee is | |
| Sufficient for GPs | A | |
| Goes too far for GPs | B | |
| Does not go far enough for GPs | C | |
| Q37 | Do you have any comments on this procedure for managing osteoarthritis of the knee? |
| Q38 | On the whole, the procedure is logical | A: YES |
| Q39 | On the whole, the procedure is easy to understand | A: YES |
| Q40 | The red flags are useful for this indication | A:YES |
| Q41 | It is logical to position the red flags from the start with osteoarthritis of the hand, owing to the differential diagnoses that could be envisaged | A: YES |
| Q42 | I believe other red flags would be useful | A: YES |
| Q42a | The fact that several joints are affected constitutes a severity factor | A: TRUE |
| Q42b | How many hand joints need to be affected for you to consider question 42a to be true? | Quantified answer |
| Q43 | The intervention threshold between the GP and the specialist seems well positioned | A: YES |
| Q44 | Only offering a plain radiograph to investigate hand/finger pain in primary care seems appropriate | A: YES |
| Q45 | If you answered NO to question 44, what further investigations would you advise a GP to perform? | Open answer |
| Q46 | Would you say then that this proposed procedure for osteoarthritis of the hand is | |
| Sufficient for GPs | A | |
| Goes too far for GPs | B | |
| Does not go far enough for GPs | C | |
| Q47 | Do you agree that a patient presenting with pain in the hand or finger joints should be referred to a specialist more quickly? | A: YES |
| Q48 | Do you have any comments on this procedure for managing osteoarthritis of the hand? |
| Q49 | Do you find this tool practical? (you consider this tool to be suited for use in GP consultations) | A: YES |
| Q50 | Does this tool seem easy to use? (this document is considered easy if it can be used by primary care doctors without complicating their relationship with the patient) | A: YES |
| Q51 | Do you agree with the board that a lower specialist intervention threshold is needed for osteoarthritis of the hands? (you consider the risk of a differential diagnosis to be high) | A: YES |
| Q52 | Do you believe that use of these guidelines by GPs could | YES/NO for each question |
| Q53 | Do you have any further comments that could improve our work? | |
| Q54 | Do you wish to be notified of the progress of this work? | YES/NO |