Literature DB >> 31516692

Next-generation ARIA care pathways for rhinitis and asthma: a model for multimorbid chronic diseases.

J Jean Bousquet1,2,3,4, Holger J Schünemann5, Alkis Togias6, Marina Erhola7, Peter W Hellings3,8,9, Torsten Zuberbier4,10, Ioana Agache11, Ignacio J Ansotegui12, Josep M Anto13,14,15,16, Claus Bachert17, Sven Becker18, Martin Bedolla-Barajas19, Michael Bewick20, Sinthia Bosnic-Anticevich21,22,23, Isabelle Bosse24, Louis P Boulet25, Jean Marc Bourrez26, Guy Brusselle27, Niels Chavannes28, Elisio Costa29, Alvaro A Cruz30,31, Wienczyslawa Czarlewski32, Wytske J Fokkens3,33, Joao A Fonseca34,35, Mina Gaga36, Tari Haahtela37, Maddalena Illario35, Ludger Klimek39, Piotr Kuna40, Violeta Kvedariene41, L T T Le42, Desiree Larenas-Linnemann43, Daniel Laune44, Olga M Lourenço45, Enrica Menditto46, Joaquin Mullol47,48, Yashitaka Okamoto49, Nikos Papadopoulos50,51, Nhân Pham-Thi52, Robert Picard53, Hilary Pinnock54, Nicolas Roche55, Regina E Roller-Wirnsberger56, Christine Rolland57, Boleslaw Samolinski58, Aziz Sheikh54, Sanna Toppila-Salmi37, Ioanna Tsiligianni59,60, Arunas Valiulis61, Erkka Valovirta62, Tuula Vasankari63, Maria-Teresa Ventura64, Samantha Walker65, Sian Williams62, Cezmi A Akdis66, Isabella Annesi-Maesano67, Sylvie Arnavielhe44, Xavier Basagana13,14,15,16, Eric Bateman68, Anna Bedbrook1, K S Bennoor69, Samuel Benveniste70, Karl C Bergmann4,10, Slawomir Bialek71, Nils Billo72, Carsten Bindslev-Jensen73,74, Leif Bjermer75, Hubert Blain76,77, Mateo Bonini78,79, Philippe Bonniaud80, Jacques Bouchard81,82, Vitalis Briedis83, Christofer E Brightling84,85, Jan Brozek5, Roland Buhl86, Roland Buonaiuto87, Giorgo W Canonica88, Victoria Cardona89, Ana M Carriazo90, Warner Carr91, Christine Cartier92, Thomas Casale93, Lorenzo Cecchi94, Alfonso M Cepeda Sarabia95,96, Eka Chkhartishvili97, Derek K Chu3, Cemal Cingi98, Elaine Colgan99, Jaime Correia de Sousa100,101, Anne Lise Courbis102, Adnan Custovic103, Biljana Cvetkosvki21,22,23, Gennaro D'Amato104, Jane da Silva105, Carina Dantas106,107, Dejand Dokic108, Yves Dauvilliers109, Antoni Dedeu110,111, Giulia De Feo112, Philippe Devillier113, Stefania Di Capua114, Marc Dykewickz115, Ruta Dubakiene116, Motohiro Ebisawa117, Yaya El-Gamal118, Esben Eller73,74, Regina Emuzyte119, John Farrell101, Antjie Fink-Wagner120, Alessandro Fiocchi121, Jean F Fontaine122, Bilun Gemicioğlu123, Peter Schmid-Grendelmeir124, Amiran Gamkrelidze125, Judith Garcia-Aymerich13, Maximiliano Gomez126, Sandra González Diaz127, Maia Gotua128, Nick A Guldemond129, Maria-Antonieta Guzmán130, Jawad Hajjam131, John O'B Hourihane132, Marc Humbert133, Guido Iaccarino134, Despo Ierodiakonou59,62, Maddalena Illario35, Juan C Ivancevich135, Guy Joos25, Ki-Suck Jung136, Marek Jutel137, Igor Kaidashev138, Omer Kalayci139, Przemyslaw Kardas140, Thomas Keil141,142, Mussa Khaitov143, Nikolai Khaltaev144, Jorg Kleine-Tebbe145, Marek L Kowalski146, Vicky Kritikos21,22,23, Inger Kull147,148, Lisa Leonardini149, Philip Lieberman150, Brian Lipworth151, Karin C Lodrup Carlsen152,153, Claudia C Loureiro154, Renaud Louis155, Alpana Mair156, Gert Marien3, Bassam Mahboub157, Joao Malva107,158, Patrick Manning159, Esteban De Manuel Keenoy160, Gailen D Marshall161, Mohamed R Masjedi162, Jorge F Maspero163, Eve Mathieu-Dupas44, Poalo M Matricardi164, Eric Melén148,165, Elisabete Melo-Gomes166, Eli O Meltzer167, Enrica Menditto46, Jacques Mercier168, Neven Miculinic169, Florin Mihaltan170, Branislava Milenkovic171, Giuliana Moda172, Maria-Dolores Mogica-Martinez173, Yousser Mohammad174,175, Steve Montefort176, Ricardo Monti177, Mario Morais-Almeida178, Ralf Mösges179,180, Lars Münter181, Antonella Muraro182, Ruth Murray183,184, Robert Naclerio185, Luigi Napoli186, Leila Namazova-Baranova187, Hugo Neffen188,189, Kristoff Nekam190, Angelo Neou191, Enrico Novellino192, Dieudonné Nyembue193, Robin O'Hehir194, Ken Ohta195, Kimi Okubo196, Gabrielle Onorato1, Solange Ouedraogo197, Isabella Pali-Schöll198, Susanna Palkonen199, Peter Panzner200, Hae-Sim Park201, Jean-Louis Pépin202,203, Ana-Maria Pereira204,205, Oliver Pfaar206, Ema Paulino207, Jim Phillips208, Robert Picard53, Davor Plavec209,210, Ted A Popov211, Fabienne Portejoie1, David Price212,213, Emmanuel P Prokopakis214, Benoit Pugin3, Filip Raciborski58, Rojin Rajabian-Söderlund215, Sietze Reitsma3,33, Xavier Rodo13, Antonino Romano216,217, Nelson Rosario218, Menahenm Rottem219, Dermot Ryan220, Johanna Salimäki221, Mario M Sanchez-Borges222, Juan-Carlos Sisul223, Dirceu Solé224, David Somekh225, Talant Sooronbaev226, Milan Sova227, Otto Spranger120, Cristina Stellato112, Rafael Stelmach228, Charlotte Suppli Ulrik229, Michel Thibaudon230, Teresa To231, Ana Todo-Bom154, Peter V Tomazic232, Antonio A Valero233, Rudolph Valenta234,235,236, Marylin Valentin-Rostan237, Rianne van der Kleij238,239, Olivier Vandenplas240, Giorgio Vezzani241, Frédéric Viart92, Giovanni Viegi242,243, Dana Wallace244, Martin Wagenmann245, De Y Wang246, Susan Waserman247, Magnus Wickman248, Dennis M Williams249, Gary Wong250, Piotr Wroczynski71, Panayiotis K Yiallouros251,252, Arzu Yorgancioglu253, Osman M Yusuf254, Heahter J Zar255,256, Stéphane Zeng257, Mario Zernotti258, Luo Zhang259, Nan S Zhong260, Mihaela Zidarn261.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: In all societies, the burden and cost of allergic and chronic respiratory diseases are increasing rapidly. Most economies are struggling to deliver modern health care effectively. There is a need to support the transformation of the health care system into integrated care with organizational health literacy. MAIN BODY: As an example for chronic disease care, MASK (Mobile Airways Sentinel NetworK), a new project of the ARIA (Allergic Rhinitis and its Impact on Asthma) initiative, and POLLAR (Impact of Air POLLution on Asthma and Rhinitis, EIT Health), in collaboration with professional and patient organizations in the field of allergy and airway diseases, are proposing real-life ICPs centred around the patient with rhinitis, and using mHealth to monitor environmental exposure. Three aspects of care pathways are being developed: (i) Patient participation, health literacy and self-care through technology-assisted "patient activation", (ii) Implementation of care pathways by pharmacists and (iii) Next-generation guidelines assessing the recommendations of GRADE guidelines in rhinitis and asthma using real-world evidence (RWE) obtained through mobile technology. The EU and global political agendas are of great importance in supporting the digital transformation of health and care, and MASK has been recognized by DG Santé as a Good Practice in the field of digitally-enabled, integrated, person-centred care.
CONCLUSION: In 20 years, ARIA has considerably evolved from the first multimorbidity guideline in respiratory diseases to the digital transformation of health and care with a strong political involvement.

Entities:  

Keywords:  ARIA; Care pathways; Health care transformation; MASK; POLLAR; Rhinitis

Year:  2019        PMID: 31516692      PMCID: PMC6734297          DOI: 10.1186/s13601-019-0279-2

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Clin Transl Allergy        ISSN: 2045-7022            Impact factor:   5.871


Background

In all societies, the burden and cost of non-communicable diseases (NCDs) are increasing rapidly as advances in sanitation, public health measures and clinical care result in changes in demography [1]. Most, if not all, economies are struggling to deliver modern health care effectively [2]. Budgets will continue to be challenged with the move towards universal health coverage as demand increases and newer, more expensive technologies become available [3-5]. Traditional programmes, heavily reliant on specialist and supporting services, are becoming unaffordable. Innovative solutions are required to alleviate system wide pressures [6, 7]. There is a need to support authorities in the transformation of the health care system into integrated care with organizational health literacy [8]. Integrated care pathways (ICPs) are structured multi-disciplinary care plans detailing the key steps of patient care [9]. They promote the translation of guideline recommendations into local protocols and their application to clinical practice. They may be of particular interest in patients with multimorbidities since guidelines rarely consider them appropriately [10, 11]. An ICP forms all or part of the clinical record, documents the care given, and facilitates the evaluation of outcomes for continuous quality improvement [12]. ICPs should be carried out by a multidisciplinary team including physicians, pharmacists [13, 14] and allied health care professionals [15]. ICPs should integrate recommendations from clinical practice guidelines, but they usually (i) enhance recommendations by combining interventions, integrating quality assurance and (ii) describe co-ordination of care. Self-care and shared decision making are at the forefront of ICPs with the aim of empowering patients and their (professional and lay) care givers. Rhinitis and asthma multimorbidity can be used as a model for chronic diseases since there is a broad agreement on the ‘gold standard’ of care [16-18]. In allergic rhinitis (AR) and asthma, adherence to treatment is a major unresolved problem [19, 20]. The vast majority of physicians prescribe regular treatment but patients (and physicians when they are allergic [21]) do not adhere to the advice. Instead of they self-treat based on personal experience as suggested by real-world data [19, 22]. There is thus a major disconnect between physicians and patients, either because of the clinical approach utilised or due to a lack of patient health literacy, with insufficient shared decision making (SDM). On-demand (prn) approaches are now proposed in both diseases [23-25] and represent a major change from previous recommendations. This new approach should be integrated in ICPs, but it needs to be applied to self-management and based on solid evidence. ICPs have been proposed with a focus on new technologies that, through personally-held data on tablet devices and recording of ‘symptom load’, should enhance self-management and adherence to guidelines and ICPs. The science of supporting self-care and ICPs through mobile devices (mHealth) is in its infancy, but preliminary results are encouraging [26-28]. In the context of asthma, a systematic review showed that mobile apps were generally as effective as traditional models of supported self-management, but that they may be preferred in some clinical and demographic contexts as being convenient as well as efficient for the patient and the professional [29]. Standardisation and the establishment of the Privacy Code of Conduct for mHealth apps [25] will be important in ensuring patients on the safeguard of their data and in helping them choose reliable technological tools, which will be essential for ICP implementation. As an example for chronic disease care, a new development of the ARIA initiative (ARIA phase 4) [30], along with POLLAR (Impact of Air POLLution on Asthma and Rhinitis), in collaboration with professional and patient organizations in the field of allergy and airway diseases, are proposing real-life ICPs centred around the patient with rhinitis, and using mHealth to monitor environmental exposure. The current document was finalized and reviewed during a meeting involving ARIA, POLLAR (Impact of Air POLLution on Asthma and Rhinitis (EIT Health)), the European Innovation Partnership on Active and Healthy Ageing and the Global Alliance against Chronic Respiratory Diseases (GARD, WHO Alliance). Major allergy societies and patient’s organizations participated in this meeting (Paris, December 3, 2018). The event was carried out with the support of many organizations (Fig. 1).
Fig. 1

Organizations supporting the meeting

Organizations supporting the meeting

The gaps in allergic rhinitis and asthma

AR is the most common chronic disease worldwide. Treatment guidelines have improved the knowledge on rhinitis and have had a significant impact on AR management. However, many patients still fail to achieve sufficient symptom control [31] and the costs for society are enormous, in particular due to a major impact on school and work productivity [32] and on allergic or non-allergic multimorbidities [33, 34]. Allergic Rhinitis and its Impact on Asthma (ARIA) has promoted the use of its recommendations [16, 35, 36] to be integrated in ICPs using mobile technology in AR and asthma multimorbidity across the life cycle [37]. The clinical problem is that a large number of AR patients do not consult physicians because they think their symptoms are ‘normal’ and/or trivial, even though AR negatively impacts social life, school and work productivity [36]. Many AR patients rely on over-the-counter (OTC) drugs and do not see the need to consult with physicians [38-41]. The vast majority of patients who visit general practitioners (GPs) or specialists have moderate-to-severe rhinitis [42-46]. ICPs should take this reality into account and consider a multi-disciplinary approach as proposed by AIRWAYS ICPs (Fig. 2).
Fig. 2

ICPs for rhinitis and asthma multimorbidity

(adapted from [102])

ICPs for rhinitis and asthma multimorbidity (adapted from [102])

Supported self-management

People with AR and asthma are, by default, making day-to-day decisions about the management of their condition (avoiding triggers, using various treatments and seeking professional advice). Reflecting this broad concept, self-management is defined as “the tasks that individuals must undertake to live well with one or more chronic conditions. These tasks include having the confidence to deal with the medical management, role management and emotional management of their conditions” [47]. The term self-care includes generic “healthy lifestyle behaviours required for human development and functioning” [48]. However, self-care and self-management overlap as, for example, smoking cessation is a generic self-care behaviour and a component of self-management for people with respiratory conditions. Self-management support is the assistance that professionals (pharmacy, primary care, specialist), patient’s organizations and other sources of information, as well as informal caregivers, give patients in order to make decisions about their condition and to manage disease and health-related tasks [49]. A taxonomy of 14 components of self-management support [50] offers a pick-list of activities that may be considered when planning self-management. These could be practical activities (e.g. teaching inhaler technique, discussing an action plan, helping to quit smoking) and imply SDM [50]. Mobile technology has the potential to contribute to many aspects of the supported self-management of chronic diseases [51]. Supported self-management is a ‘key principle’ for ICPs in long-term conditions [52, 53]. This not only reflects the paradigm shift towards SDM, but also includes pragmatic, economic imperatives, as healthcare systems respond to the increasing NCD burden. The economic impact of effective supported self-management goes beyond healthcare savings. For example, major economic return can be in the workplace where absenteeism and, more importantly, presenteeism are reduced [32] leading to an increased productivity. Patient activation, defined as the “knowledge, skills and confidence a person has in managing his/her own health and health care” [54], is a goal of many ICP models. “Activation” encompasses the patients’ beliefs about their ability to self-manage (self-efficacy) and the likelihood that they will put these beliefs into action. Levels of activation range from the disengaged patients who let others manage their condition to the fully “activated” patients who embrace SDM and manage their health in partnership with their healthcare advisors, understanding the escalation of treatment options and when to seek pharmacy or medical advice. Higher levels of activation have been associated with better process and health outcomes in adults [55] and there is some evidence that appropriately-targeted self-management support may be more beneficial to disadvantaged groups than to higher literacy/socioeconomic status patients. Although ARIA appears to meet the patient’s needs, real-life data obtained using the Allergy Diary (MASK-air®) app from around 10,000 people in 23 countries (Argentina, Austria, Australia, Belgium, Brazil, Canada, Czech Republic, Denmark, Finland, France, Germany, Greece, Italy, Lithuania, Mexico, Netherlands, Poland, Portugal, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, UK. Brazil is a developing country) have shown that very few patients are being treated according to guidelines and that they often self-medicate [19]. Self-medication is the treatment of common health problems with medicines without medical supervision. It is important to ensure that well-written, short and accurate self-management information is available for people to pick up in pharmacies, or for download. In the case of AR, many patients have prescribed medications at home and, when symptoms occur, they use them. Self-care and SDM centred around the patient should be used more often [56]. ARIA has already followed a change management (CM) strategy embedding the AR-asthma multimorbidity in every day practice [30], but a new CM is now being considered to increase the benefits of self-care and SDM in ICPs using currently-available IT tools. In the case of AR and asthma multimorbidity, aeroallergen exposure and pollution impact disease control and medications. However, there is currently no ICP in airway diseases that takes such environmental parameters into account [57]. These initiatives should prepare and support individuals, teams and organizations in making organizational change centred around the patient. mHealth, such as apps running on consumer smart devices, is becoming increasingly popular and has the potential to profoundly affect health care and health outcomes [58]. Several apps exist for AR and asthma [59-63]. A review of the Apps in the field of allergic diseases has recently been completed (Matricardi et al. in preparation). One of the reviews—MASK (Mobile Airways Sentinel NetworK), the Phase 3 ARIA initiative [37, 64]—is based on the freely-available MASK app (the Allergy Diary, Android and iOS platforms) for AR and asthma. Importantly, MASK is available in 17 languages and deployed in 23 countries [64]. Data from 26,000 users reporting over 200,000 days of treatment are available. It complies with the recent General Data Protection Regulation (EU) 2016/679 (GDPR) enforced by the EU, May 25, 2018 [65]. The GDPR aims primarily to give control to citizens and residents over their personal data and to simplify the regulatory environment by unifying the regulation within the EU [66, 67]. Importantly, MASK enables the assessment of treatment patterns in real life and provides detailed information on treatment, given that the Allergy Diary is able to distinguish between AR medications [19].

On-line information

Most patients check on-line to help them decide what the problem is and how to address it. This is a crucial self-management area of support and we need to think about how it can be optimized. Because of the multiplicity of sources and the lack of reliability control, it should be recognized that such a task would require an enormous effort. Consequently, it has been abandoned by many other bodies/disease areas. One approach that may be of value in improving reliability would be to focus on sites that provide useful information and generate an accreditation process with international standing.

Pharmacist care

Pharmacists are trusted health care professionals. Most patients with rhinitis are seen by pharmacists who are the initial point of contact of AR management in most countries. Depending on the country, few or most AR medications are available over-the-counter (OTC) [68-71] and are used by many patients. Therefore, as trusted health care professionals in the community, pharmacists are well placed to play a critical role identifying the symptoms of AR, recommending appropriate OTC treatment [38, 39, 41] and integrating health care teams through ICPs [13, 14]. The specific role of pharmacists in the management of AR within ICPs can been evidenced from several strategies that have been initiated [72] or completed and from studies confirming the important impact of pharmacist interventions on AR outcomes [40, 70, 73–80]. ARIA in the pharmacy 2004 [38] is being revised in order to propose ICPs involving a multi-disciplinary approach. This paper has been built on the evidence and provides tools intended to help pharmacists give optimal advice/interventions/strategies to patients with rhinitis. The ARIA-pharmacy ICP includes a diagnostic questionnaire specifically focusing attention on key symptoms and markers of the disease, a systematic Diagnosis Guide (including a differential diagnosis) and a simple flowchart proposing treatment for rhinitis and asthma multimorbidity. Key prompts for referral within the ICP are included. The use of technology is critical for enhancing the management of AR. The ARIA-pharmacy ICP should be adapted to local health care environments/situations as large regional or national differences in pharmacy-based care exist.

Next-generation guidelines

Practice guidelines contain evidence-based statements about treatment, tests, public health actions and policy decisions intended to assist recipients of care and their care providers in making informed decisions. ARIA was one of the first chronic respiratory disease guidelines to adopt the GRADE (Grading of Recommendation, Assessment, Development and Evaluation) approach, an advanced evidence evaluation and development approach for guidelines [16, 81–83]. GRADE-based guidelines are available for AR from other organizations and their recommendations are similar [16-18]. However, a limitation of GRADE is that evidence often lacks applicability because the populations studied do not reflect most of the patients seen in primary care [84]. The GRADE recommendations are often based on RCT in which patients regularly use their treatment, whereas most AR or asthma patients are non-adherent. GRADE rarely includes recommendations based on implementation research. The more recently completed work by the GRADE working group on its Evidence to Decision Frameworks requires that guideline developers regularly address implementation and monitoring strategies [85-89]. Searching for and synthesizing evidence of effective implementation strategies enabled the BTS/SIGN asthma guideline to make a recommendation on how supported self-management for asthma could be embedded into routine practice [90]. Strategies include proactively engaging and empowering patients, training and motivating professionals as well as providing an environment that promotes self-management and monitors implementation [91]. In AR, cluster-randomized controlled trials have confirmed the overall value of guidelines [92, 93]. However, there has been only one direct testing of individual guideline recommendations in real–life studies in an effort to achieve optimization [94]. Next-generation ARIA-GRADE guidelines should consider testing the recommendations based on the GRADE approach with real-world evidence (RWE) using data obtained by mHealth tools such as MASK in order to confirm the efficiency or to refine current GRADE-based recommendations. The first results of MASK confirm the feasibility of the project [19]. Adherence to treatment is very low as < 5% of users record symptoms and medications for a period of 2 weeks. This indicates that it is important to further test whether on-demand is equally or even more efficient than regular-continuous treatment and that guidelines should consider both regular and on-demand treatment [19, 95]. Guideline recommendations often address isolated questions or focus on a single disease or problem. They should be considered in the context of the many decisions that are made. ICPs try to address the multiple options and iterative changes in a patient’s status and problems. Guideline recommendations should support these iterative changes. The key challenge for conventional treatment guidelines is that available evidence, both from randomized trials and non-randomized studies, does not usually address the complex pathways, but only affects isolated decision points within a pathway. For example, when an oral H1-antihistamine is not achieving symptom control, we propose to replace it by an intra-nasal corticosteroid. However, this is often not the way that studies are designed and not how patients use these medications. Assuming that properly developed pathways require evidence, our guidelines must start identifying the best available evidence to support decision points. When the evidence is indirect, which is frequently the case, connecting the relevant decision points and considering all of that evidence together results in low certainty on the overall structure and timing of an ICP. The next-generation guidelines, if complemented by the intelligent use of tools such as MASK, which records patients’ symptoms and provides advice at given time points to follow ICPs, could exemplify unique new tools to both implement and evaluate recommendations in the context of pathways. Studies should be carried out in which patients are randomized to ICPs or to follow ARIA recommendations that are not presented as pathways. Such studies will provide both information on the use of the recommendations and on the usefulness of the pathways. Through implementation of recommendations, we will be able to increase our certainty in the evidence by evaluating the entire pathway and measuring outcomes in direct population-based studies that record what patients do as opposed to what clinicians prescribe (and patients do not do).

Study proposals of ARIA phase 4 and POLLAR

ARIA Phase 4 is the change management strategy for AR and asthma [96]. POLLAR is an EIT-Health (European Institute for Innovation and technology) project which aims to better understand, prevent and manage the impact of air pollution and allergen exposure on airway diseases [57]. POLLAR will use the MASK App, which is a Good Practice [64]. One of the POLLAR work-packages is the development of ICPs integrating aerobiology and air pollution. This will be developed using a step-wise approach centred around the patient. The four-step project is a WHO Global Alliance against Chronic Respiratory Diseases (GARD) demonstration project.

Step 1: First meeting (December 3, 2018, Paris): Development of next-generation ICPs with a focus on self-management, pharmacy care and next-generation guidelines

The Paris meeting addressed a number of areas as delineated below (Fig. 3).
Fig. 3

Next-generation ICPs for rhinitis and asthma multi-morbidity

Next-generation ICPs for rhinitis and asthma multi-morbidity

Step 2: 2019–2021: Further development and implementation of next-generation ICPs

Develop a strategic and practical approach to improving patient autonomy and self-management programmes. Deploy to other chronic respiratory diseases (asthma, COPD and rhinosinusitis [97]) and NCDs developing a multimorbidity App based on MASK expertise and experience. Develop documents for specific age groups: pre-school and school children, older adults. Establish a best practice across several regions in the EU linking the study to policy makers aiming to improve air quality and outcomes in their population.

Step 3: Second meeting (December 2019): Embedding environmental data in next-generation ICPs

Using the results obtained by POLLAR for air pollution, a second meeting will be held to integrate aerobiology and air pollution data in mobile technology and to propose ICPs for the prevention of severe exacerbations and asthma during peaks of allergens and/or pollution. This meeting will also consider the deployment to other chronic diseases (Fig. 4) and the impact of biodiversity in chronic diseases [98].
Fig. 4

Embedding aerobiology and air pollution in ICPs

Embedding aerobiology and air pollution in ICPs

Embedding next-generation care pathways in the EU and global political agendas for allergic and chronic respiratory diseases

The Polish Presidency of the EU Council (2011) targeted CRDs in children to promote their early recognition, prevention and management to ultimately impact active and healthy ageing (AHA) [99]. The developmental determinants of CRDs in ageing were reinforced during the Cyprus Presidency of the EU Council “Healthy ageing across the lifecycle” (2012) [100] and an EU-NIH meeting held in Montpellier (2013) [101]. The objective of AIRWAYS-ICPs [102] was to launch a collaboration to develop multi-sectoral ICPs for CRDs in European countries and regions. AIRWAYS-ICPs was initiated in 2014 by the European Innovation Partnership on Active and Healthy Ageing (EIP on AHA, DG Santé and DG CONNECT) [103] as a GARD (Global Alliance against Chronic Respiratory Diseases) demonstration project [104]. In collaboration with GARD, the Directorate General of Health of Portugal, the EIP on AHA and the Région Occitanie (France), a high-level meeting was organized July 1, 2015 with all major European scientific societies and patient’s organizations in Lisbon to review the implementation results of AIRWAYS ICPs [105]. Euforea (European Forum for Research and Education in Allergy and Airway Diseases) [56] proposed an annual stepwise strategy at the EU or ministerial levels. A European Symposium on Precision Medicine in Allergy and Airways Diseases was held at the EU Parliament October 14, 2015 [106]. Another EU Parliament meeting was held in Brussels March 29, 2017 on the Prevention and Self-Management of CRDs using novel mobile health tools [37, 56, 97]. POLLAR (Impact of air POLLution on Asthma and Rhinitis, EIT Health) is focusing on the impact of allergens and air pollution on airway diseases and aims to propose novel ICPs integrating pollution, sleep and patients’ literacy and to assess the societal implications of the interaction [57]. Euforea organized an EU Summit in Vilnius, Lithuania (March 2018) in collaboration with the Ministers of Health of Lithuania, Moldova, Georgia and Ukraine. The aim was to discuss and start the implementation of the POLLAR concepts, and to deploy it to EU neighboring countries. The Vilnius Declaration on Chronic Respiratory Diseases proposed multisectoral ICPs embedding guided self-management, mHealth and air pollution in CRDs [107]. The joint meeting discussed in this report (December 3, 2018) proposed next-generation care pathways based on the Vilnius Declaration. MASK has been selected by the European Commission’s Directorate-General for Health and Food Safety (DG SANTE) and the newly-established Commission Expert Group “Steering Group on Health Promotion, Disease Prevention and Management of Non-Communicable Diseases” as a Good Practice (GP) in the field of digitally-enabled, integrated, person-centred care. On May 3, 2019, a Euforea-led meeting took place in the Parliament of Malta to review the results of the December 3 meeting and to propose practical strategies at the EU and global levels with GARD. This new next-generation care pathway is completely aligned with the recommendations issued by the Thematic Network SHAFE—Smart Healthy Age-Friendly Environments (approved by the European Commission—DG SANTE and DG CONNECT)—on its Joint Statement delivered 12th November 2018. The Statement underlined the need to patient empowerment and active involvement in its healthcare process and also urged the use of lifestyle medicine that provides effective impact on the patient’s wellbeing.

Conclusions

There is a need to support the digital transformation of health and care with integrated care. An innovative patient-centered approach is proposed by the ARIA expert group for rhinitis and asthma multimorbidity to be scaled up to chronic diseases. Additional file 1. The MASK Study Group.
  94 in total

Review 1.  Allergic rhinitis and its impact on asthma.

Authors:  J Bousquet; P Van Cauwenberge; N Khaltaev
Journal:  J Allergy Clin Immunol       Date:  2001-11       Impact factor: 10.793

2.  The effect of the Rx-to-OTC switch of loratadine and changes in prescription drug benefits on utilization and cost of therapy.

Authors:  Patrick W Sullivan; Kavita V Nair; Bimal V Patel
Journal:  Am J Manag Care       Date:  2005-06       Impact factor: 2.229

3.  Characteristics of intermittent and persistent allergic rhinitis: DREAMS study group.

Authors:  J Bousquet; I Annesi-Maesano; F Carat; D Léger; M Rugina; C Pribil; A El Hasnaoui; I Chanal
Journal:  Clin Exp Allergy       Date:  2005-06       Impact factor: 5.018

4.  Is patient activation associated with outcomes of care for adults with chronic conditions?

Authors:  David M Mosen; Julie Schmittdiel; Judith Hibbard; David Sobel; Carol Remmers; Jim Bellows
Journal:  J Ambul Care Manage       Date:  2007 Jan-Mar

Review 5.  Optimising the management of allergic rhinitis: an Australian perspective.

Authors:  Ronald S Walls; Robert J Heddle; Mimi L K Tang; Ben J Basger; Graham O Solley; Guan T Yeo
Journal:  Med J Aust       Date:  2005-01-03       Impact factor: 7.738

6.  Patient self-management of chronic disease in primary care.

Authors:  Thomas Bodenheimer; Kate Lorig; Halsted Holman; Kevin Grumbach
Journal:  JAMA       Date:  2002-11-20       Impact factor: 56.272

7.  Severity and impairment of allergic rhinitis in patients consulting in primary care.

Authors:  Jean Bousquet; Françoise Neukirch; Philippe J Bousquet; Pierre Gehano; Jean Michel Klossek; Martine Le Gal; Bashar Allaf
Journal:  J Allergy Clin Immunol       Date:  2005-12-02       Impact factor: 10.793

8.  Global alliance against chronic respiratory diseases.

Authors:  J Bousquet; R Dahl; N Khaltaev
Journal:  Allergy       Date:  2007-03       Impact factor: 13.146

9.  Implementation of guidelines for seasonal allergic rhinitis: a randomized controlled trial.

Authors:  J Bousquet; V J Lund; P van Cauwenberge; C Bremard-Oury; N Mounedji; M T Stevens; T El-Akkad
Journal:  Allergy       Date:  2003-08       Impact factor: 13.146

10.  ARIA in the pharmacy: management of allergic rhinitis symptoms in the pharmacy. Allergic rhinitis and its impact on asthma.

Authors: 
Journal:  Allergy       Date:  2004-04       Impact factor: 13.146

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  21 in total

Review 1.  ARIA 2019, Allerjik Rinite Tedavi Yaklaşımı-Türkiye.

Authors:  Ayşe Arzu Yorgancıoğlu; Bilun Gemicioğlu; Cemal Cingi; Ömer Kalaycı; Ali Fuat Kalyoncu; Claus Bachert; Peter Hellings; Oliver Pfaar; Holger J Schünemann; Dana Wallace; Anna Bedbrook; Wienczyslawa Czarlewski; Jean Bousquet
Journal:  Turk Thorac J       Date:  2020-03-01

Review 2.  ARIA 2019 Care Pathways for Allergic Rhinitis in the Kuwait Health Care System.

Authors:  Mona Al-Ahmad; Jasmina Nurkic; Claus Bachert; Oliver Pfaar; Holger J Schunemann; Wienczyslawa Czarlewski; Anna Bedbrook; Jean Bosquet
Journal:  Med Princ Pract       Date:  2020-10-23       Impact factor: 1.927

3.  Indoor air pollution effects on pediatric asthma are submicron aerosol particle-dependent.

Authors:  Izabele Juskiene; Nina Prokopciuk; Ulrich Franck; Algirdas Valiulis; Vaidotas Valskys; Vitalija Mesceriakova; Violeta Kvedariene; Indre Valiulyte; Edita Poluzioroviene; Ingrida Sauliene; Arunas Valiulis
Journal:  Eur J Pediatr       Date:  2022-03-21       Impact factor: 3.183

4.  White Paper on European Patient Needs and Suggestions on Chronic Type 2 Inflammation of Airways and Skin by EUFOREA.

Authors:  Louise De Prins; Ulrike Raap; Tara Mueller; Peter Schmid-Grendelmeier; Christiane H Haase; Vibeke Backer; Wytske Fokkens; Linda B Benoist; Emmanuel Prokopakis; Claire Hopkins; Nele Claeys; Thijs Teeling; Lindsay Cypers; Leen Cools; Leif H Bjermer; Zuzana Diamant; Ulrich Wahn; Glenis Scadding; Claus Bachert; Sunni R Patel; Elizabeth Van Staeyen; Peter Hellings
Journal:  Front Allergy       Date:  2022-06-02

5.  Effectiveness of submucosal turbinoplasty in refractory obstructive rhinitis: a prospective comparative trial.

Authors:  Antonino Maniaci; Jerome Rene Lechien; Ignazio La Mantia; Christian Calvo-Henriquez; Giannicola Iannella; Luca Giovanni Locatello; Alberto Maria Saibene; Sowerby J Leigh; Angelo Ingrassia; Francesco Nocera; Giacomo Spinato; Salvatore Cocuzza
Journal:  Eur Arch Otorhinolaryngol       Date:  2022-01-25       Impact factor: 3.236

6.  Differentiation of COVID-19 signs and symptoms from allergic rhinitis and common cold: An ARIA-EAACI-GA2 LEN consensus.

Authors:  Jan Hagemann; Gabrielle L Onorato; Marek Jutel; Cezmi A Akdis; Ioana Agache; Torsten Zuberbier; Wienczyslawa Czarlewski; Joaquim Mullol; Anna Bedbrook; Claus Bachert; Kazi S Bennoor; Karl-Christian Bergmann; Fulvio Braido; Paulo Camargos; Luis Caraballo; Victoria Cardona; Thomas Casale; Lorenzo Cecchi; Tomas Chivato; Derek K Chu; Cemal Cingi; Jaime Correia-de-Sousa; Stefano Del Giacco; Dejan Dokic; Mark Dykewicz; Motohiro Ebisawa; Yehia El-Gamal; Regina Emuzyte; Jean-Luc Fauquert; Alessandro Fiocchi; Wytske J Fokkens; Joao A Fonseca; Bilun Gemicioglu; René-Maximiliano Gomez; Maia Gotua; Tari Haahtela; Eckard Hamelmann; Tomohisa Iinuma; Juan Carlos Ivancevich; Ewa Jassem; Omer Kalayci; Przemyslaw Kardas; Musa Khaitov; Piotr Kuna; Violeta Kvedariene; Desiree E Larenas-Linnemann; Brian Lipworth; Michael Makris; Jorge F Maspero; Neven Miculinic; Florin Mihaltan; Yousser Mohammad; Stephen Montefort; Mario Morais-Almeida; Ralph Mösges; Robert Naclerio; Hugo Neffen; Marek Niedoszytko; Robyn E O'Hehir; Ken Ohta; Yoshitaka Okamoto; Kimi Okubo; Petr Panzner; Nikolaos G Papadopoulos; Giovanni Passalacqua; Vincenzo Patella; Ana Pereira; Oliver Pfaar; Davor Plavec; Todor A Popov; Emmanuel P Prokopakis; Francesca Puggioni; Filip Raciborski; Jere Reijula; Frederico S Regateiro; Sietze Reitsma; Antonino Romano; Nelson Rosario; Menachem Rottem; Dermot Ryan; Boleslaw Samolinski; Joaquin Sastre; Dirceu Solé; Milan Sova; Cristiana Stellato; Charlotte Suppli-Ulrik; Ioanna Tsiligianni; Antonio Valero; Arunas Valiulis; Erkka Valovirta; Tuula Vasankari; Maria Teresa Ventura; Dana Wallace; De Yun Wang; Siân Williams; Arzu Yorgancioglu; Osman M Yusuf; Mario Zernotti; Jean Bousquet; Ludger Klimek
Journal:  Allergy       Date:  2021-05-14       Impact factor: 14.710

Review 7.  Digital transformation of health and care to sustain Planetary Health: The MASK proof-of-concept for airway diseases-POLLAR symposium under the auspices of Finland's Presidency of the EU, 2019 and MACVIA-France, Global Alliance against Chronic Respiratory Diseases (GARD, WH0) demonstration project, Reference Site Collaborative Network of the European Innovation Partnership on Active and Healthy Ageing.

Authors:  Jean Bousquet; Josep M Anto; Tari Haahtela; Pekka Jousilahti; Marina Erhola; Xavier Basagaña; Wienczyslawa Czarlewski; Mikaëla Odemyr; Susanna Palkonen; Mikael Sofiev; César Velasco; Anna Bedbrook; Rodrigo Delgado; Rostislav Kouznetsov; Mika Mäkelä; Yuliia Palamarchuk; Kimmo Saarinen; Erja Tommila; Erkka Valovirta; Tuula Vasankari; Torsten Zuberbier; Isabella Annesi-Maesano; Samuel Benveniste; Eve Mathieu-Dupas; Jean-Louis Pépin; Robert Picard; Stéphane Zeng; Julia Ayache; Nuria Calves Venturos; Yann Micheli; Ingrid Jullian-Desayes; Daniel Laune
Journal:  Clin Transl Allergy       Date:  2020-06-19       Impact factor: 5.871

8.  Prevalence and attributable health burden of chronic respiratory diseases, 1990-2017: a systematic analysis for the Global Burden of Disease Study 2017.

Authors: 
Journal:  Lancet Respir Med       Date:  2020-06       Impact factor: 30.700

Review 9.  Aligning the Good Practice MASK With the Objectives of the European Innovation Partnership on Active and Healthy Ageing.

Authors:  J Bousquet; J Farrell; M Illario
Journal:  Allergy Asthma Immunol Res       Date:  2020-03       Impact factor: 5.764

10.  Effect of nasal irrigation on allergic rhinitis control in children; complementarity between CARAT and MASK outcomes.

Authors:  Dimitrios I Mitsias; Maria V Dimou; John Lakoumentas; Konstantinos Alevizopoulos; Bernardo Sousa-Pinto; Joao A Fonseca; Jean Bousquet; Nikolaos G Papadopoulos
Journal:  Clin Transl Allergy       Date:  2020-03-13       Impact factor: 5.871

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