| Literature DB >> 31500394 |
Bogdan Batko1,2, Krzysztof Batko3, Marcin Krzanowski4, Zbigniew Żuber5,6.
Abstract
Principles of treat-to-target (T2T) have been widely adopted in both multinational and regional guidelines for rheumatoid arthritis (RA). Several questionnaire studies among physicians and real-world data have suggested that an evidence-practice gap exists in RA management. Investigating physician adherence to T2T, which requires a process measure, is difficult. Different practice patterns among physicians are observed, while adherence to protocolized treatment declines over time. Rheumatologist awareness, agreement, and claims of adherence to T2T guidelines are not always consistent with medical records. Comorbidities, a difficult disease course, communication barriers, and individual preferences may hinder an intensive, proactive treatment stance. Interpreting deviations from protocolized treatment/T2T guidelines requires sufficient clinical context, though higher adherence seems to improve clinical outcomes. Nonmedical constraints in routine care may consist of barriers in healthcare structure and socioeconomic factors. Therefore, strategies to improve the institution of T2T should be tailored to local healthcare. Educational interventions to improve T2T adherence among physicians may show a moderate, although beneficial effect. Meanwhile, a proportion of patients with inadequately controlled RA exists, while management decisions may not be in accordance with T2T. Physicians tend to be aware of current guidelines, but their institution in routine practice seems challenging, which warrants attention and further study.Entities:
Keywords: arthritis; guideline adherence; physicians; physicians’; practice patterns; rheumatoid; rheumatologists; treat-to-target
Year: 2019 PMID: 31500394 PMCID: PMC6780913 DOI: 10.3390/jcm8091416
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Clin Med ISSN: 2077-0383 Impact factor: 4.241
Overview of observational studies with relevance to treat-to-target (T2T) adherence among physicians.
| Reference | Design | Characteristics | Population (n) | Follow-Up | Study Aim(s) | Outcome(s) | Key Findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Vermeer et al., 2012, Arthritis Res Ther [ | longitudinal, observational multicenter (DREAM cohort) | early RA, DMARD naïve | 100 | 28 m | Medical chart review to assess T2T; systematic monitoring with DAS28 and following treatment advice, evaluating deviations, and reasons for nonadherence | (i) visits when DAS28 was determined | (i) 98% of total visits had DAS28, of these 88% agreed with T2T monitoring |
| Escalas et al., 2012, Ann Rheum Dis [ | longitudinal, observational multicenter (ESPOIR cohort) | early RA, DMARD naïve | 782 | 24 m | Adherence to 2007 EULAR guidelines and impact on radiographic progression and functional ability | (i) DMARDS in patients at risk of erosive/persistent disease | For (i–iii), adherence was 78%, 67%, and 52%, respectively, for all three 23%, |
| Wabe et al., 2015, Int J Rheum Dis [ | single-center, longitudinal | early RA, DMARD naïve | 149 | 36 m | Extent of compliance with T2T strategy necessary to achieve optimal rates of good response at visits | (i) treatment decisions compliant with T2T protocol | (i) 76% of visits |
| Lesuis et al., 2016, RMD Open [ | single-center, retrospective | early and longstanding RA | 137 | 12 m | (i) guideline adherence in standard care | 7 dichotomous guideline adherence parameters (diagnostics, treatment, follow-up and shared care), guideline adherence on patient and visit level, determinants on patient and provider level | (i–ii) therapy change in active disease —67%, regular outpatient visits with DAS28 assessment—37%, correct interval between outpatient visit—32% |
| Xie et al., 2018, Clin Exp Rheumatol [ | single-center, retrospective | early and longstanding RA, proportion treatment naïve | 704 | 12 m | Sub-cohort trend analyses for first clinic visit prior to and after 2011, comparison with composite indices | Trends in RA control prior to and after publication of guidelines | Higher proportion of pts with low-disease activity and remission in T2T. |
| Taylor et al., 2018, Patient Prefer Adherence [ | cross-sectional, multinational, data from Adelphi 2014 Disease Specific Programme | early and longstanding RA | 2536 | N/A | Implementation of T2T in European centers when comparing pts with RA diagnosis <2 or ≥2 years | Applied strategy | Proportion of pts (%) treated with respective strategy in early RA |
(i) Abbreviations: Not applicable (N/A), rheumatoid arthritis (RA), disease activity score using 28-joint count (DAS28), patients (pts), low-disease activity (LDA), treat-to-target (T2T), year (y), month (m), Health Assessment Questionnaire (HAQ), Odds Ratio (OR), confidence interval (CI), European League Against Rheumatism (EULAR), Dutch Rheumatoid Arthritis Monitoring registry (DREAM), Etude et Suivi des Polyarthrites Indifferenciees Recentes (ESPOIR). (ii) Definitions of disease character vary across studies; if studies divided patients by RA course, we adopted a definition of early and longstanding RA where deemed appropriate.
Overview of studies based on clinical trials with relevance to treat-to-target adherence among physicians.
| Reference | Design | Characteristics | Population (n) | Follow-Up | Study Aim (s) | Outcome (s) | Key Findings | Commentary |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Harrold et al., 2018, Arthritis Care Res [ | cluster randomized multicenter controlled trial | Pts eligible for treatment “acceleration” as assessed by rheumatologist, no criteria for prior medication use or disease duration, moderate to severe RA (CDAI > 10) | 532 | every 3 m (total 12 m) | Feasibility and efficacy of T2T vs. usual care | (i) rate of treatment acceleration conditional on CDAI >10 | (i) T2T, 47% vs. UC, 50%; OR [95% CI], 0.92 [0.64–1.34]) | questionnaire-based, intention-to-treat analysis (ii), T2T physicians received prior training, while UC were aware of study aim, outcome assessed on patient level |
| Yu et al., 2017 Arthritis Care Res [ | cluster randomized multicenter TRACTION controlled trial | early to longstanding RA in standard care | 641 | 4 m for baseline and 4 m for intervention, total 9 m | Adherence to T2T in practice via screening of medical data | (i) specified disease activity target | (i–v) 64% of visits with no T2T element, | data extraction from electronic database of visits, intra- and inter-rater kappa ≥90, external assessors (not self-report) from study staff, outcome not on clinical level but as process-measure (visit level) |
| Solomon et al., 2017, Arthritis Rheumatol [ | Impact of learning collaborative on T2T implementation | (i) change in composite T2T score [primary] | (i) baseline for both arms (11%), after 9 months intervention, 57% vs. control, 25% | randomization at site level, unblinded, sample size calculations may not be optimal, primary outcome was not validated previously, little data for baseline disease activity | ||||
| Kuusaulo et al., 2015, Scan J Rheumatol [ | randomized, double-blinded, multicenter NEO-RACo controlled trial [NCT0090808] | early, active RA, DMARDs naïve | 99 | total 60 m (24 m for adherence) | Physician adherence to treatment protocol (CIS score) and clinical outcomes | (i) NEO-RACo remission | (i) 3 m; lower CIS in pts with remission, 0.77 (0.62) vs. w/o 1.46 (0.74), at 2 y 1.83 (1.26) and 3.29 (2.61), respectively | retrospective analysis, internal consistency for scoring system 0.58 (0.40–0.76), majority of CIS from lack of i.a. GCs, physicians divided into tertiles by adherence, |
| Markusse et al., 2016, Arthritis Care & Res [ | multicenter, randomized, controlled | early, active RA, DMARDs naïve | 508 | 120 m | Evaluation of adherence to DAS-steered T2T strategy in RA with regard to associated conditions | Questionnaire response and T2T adherence; | (i) Average 79% in 10-y (100 to 60% at end) | treatment protocol designed by participating physicians, potential learning curve, and inclusion of younger rheumatologists more accustomed to “T2T”, questionnaire based, some analysis based on hypothetical conditions |
(i) Abbreviations: Usual care (UC), treat-to-target (T2T), odds ratio (OR), confidence interval (CI), month (m), year (y), disease modifying antirheumatic drug (DMARD), biologic (b), glucocorticoids (GCs), rheumatoid arthritis (RA), disease activity score (DAS), Low Disease Activity (LDA), Clinical Disease Activity Index (CDAI), new Finnish RA Combination Therapy (NEO-RACo), Behandel Strategieen (BeSt), treat-to-target in RA: Collaboration to Improve adoption and adherence (TRACTION). (ii) Cumulative Inactivity Scale (CIS) is a measure of adherence (lower score, higher adherence, maximum nonadherence of 15).