| Literature DB >> 31105931 |
Sachin Khunti1, Kamlesh Khunti2, Samuel Seidu3.
Abstract
Early glycaemic control leads to better outcomes, including a reduction in long-term macrovascular and microvascular complications. Despite good-quality evidence, glycaemic control has been shown to be inadequate globally. Therapeutic inertia has been shown present in all stages of treatment intensification, from the first oral antihyperglycaemic drug (OAD), all the way to the initiation of insulin. The causes and possible solutions to the problem of therapeutic inertia are complex but can be understood better when viewed from the perspective of the providers [healthcare professionals (HCPs)], patients and healthcare systems. In this review, we will discuss the possible aetiologies, consequences and solutions of therapeutic inertia, drawing upon evidence from published literature on the subject of type 2 diabetes.Entities:
Keywords: Therapeutic inertia; causes; insulin; oral antihyperglycaemic drugs; patient level; prevalence; providers; system level; type 2 diabetes
Year: 2019 PMID: 31105931 PMCID: PMC6502982 DOI: 10.1177/2042018819844694
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ther Adv Endocrinol Metab ISSN: 2042-0188 Impact factor: 3.565
Studies reporting methods on how to overcome therapeutic inertia at the provider level.
| author, year, country | Number of participants | Key findings on how to overcome inertia | |
|---|---|---|---|
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| Berlowitz et al[ | 23,291 | The study concluded that measuring therapeutic inertia can be a method to improve the management of T2DM by providers | |
| Philips et al.[ | 4,138 | Patients were randomised into a control group, or one of three interventions; computerised reminders with patient specific feedback, individual feedback or both. The study showed a significant decrease in HbA1c in the group with both interventions compared to the control (final HbA1c of 7.46% compared to 7.84%, P<0.02) | |
| Shah et al[ | 2,502 | 45.1% of patients with specialist care versus 37.4% with primary care had drug intensification. Specialist diabetes practitioners are more aggressive at initiating insulin compared to primary care providers | |
| Ziemer et al[ | 345 | Patients were randomised to control or to receive computerised reminders providing patient-specific recommendations. Results showed intensification was more in the feedback alone and feedback plus reminders groups than for reminders alone and control groups. After 3 years, HCP behaviour in the reminders alone and control groups returned to baseline, whereas improvement was continued in the feedback alone and feedback plus reminders groups | |
| Bruggen et al[ | 1,283 | 45% of patients with poor diabetes or lipid control did not receive treatment intensification following an intervention of nurses assisting general practitioners, compared with 90% in a control group. The study concluded that nurses assisting general practitioners in managing patients with diabetes is beneficial due to nurses having more time to reviewing, educating and monitoring patients. | |
| Mackey et al[ | 714 | Patients were allocated into an intervention group with co-treatment by a nurse practitioner or physician assistant, and into a control group without co-treatment. Patients in the intervention group had a significantly lower mean point-of-care glucose level at 24 hours before discharge compared to the control group (P=0.042). |
See supplementary file for full references.
Studies reporting methods on how to overcome therapeutic inertia at the patient level.
| author, year, country | Number of participants | Key findings on how to overcome inertia |
|---|---|---|
| Davies et al[ | 4,961 | Patients were randomly allocated into a patient-led titration group (algorithm 1) and into a physician titration group (algorithm 2). Patient-led simple titration algorithms resulted in significantly greater HbA1c reductions vs physician-led adjustment of insulin glargine (-1.22% reduction vs -1.08% reduction, P<0.001) |
| Greenwood et al[ | 90 | Participants were placed into a normal control group and a telehealth monitoring group with glucose testing which gave feedback to individuals along with personal glucose data. The control group had a mean HbA1c decrease of 0.7% whereas the telehealth monitoring group had a mean HbA1c decrease of 1.11% |
| Badawy et al[ | 15 studies | 7/15 studies in this systematic review reported significant improvement in patient adherence with the use of text messaging and mobile phone application interventions |
See supplementary file for full references.
Studies reporting methods on how to overcome therapeutic inertia at the system level.
| author, year, country | Number of participants | Key findings on how to overcome inertia |
|---|---|---|
| Tshiananga et al[ | 34 studies, 5,993 patients | Nurse-led diabetes self-education led to a mean reduction of -0.70% in HbA1c compared to -0.21% reduction with usual care. Nurse-led education also improved CV risk factors. |
| Apsey et al[ | A nurse practitioner delivered educational sessions and support for surgical services. The data for this interventional period was compared to a historical control period, and it was shown that 32% of intervention cases lead to the administration of basal-bolus insulin compared to 9% in the control period. Additionally, mean glucose values were lower for the intervention period (149 mg/dL) compared to the control period (163 mg/dL) | |
| Furler et al[ | 266 | Patients were allocated into two groups; the first being the Stepping Up model of care group which involved theory based changes to practice systems and modified roles of HCPs, and the second being a control. The intervention group demonstrated an increase in insulin initiation (70% vs 22%, 95% CI, P<0.001) along with a greater percentage of individuals reaching target HbA1c in the intervention group compared to control (36% vs 19%, CI 95%, P=0.02) and a significant reduction of 0.7% in HbA1c in the intervention group (95% CI, p<0.001) |
See supplementary file for full references.