| Literature DB >> 32333261 |
Martijn A Spruit1,2,3,4, Alex Van't Hul5, Hilde L Vreeken6, Emmylou Beekman6,7,8,9, Maria H T Post10, Guus A Meerhoff6, Anne-Loes Van der Valk11, Cor Zagers12, Maurice J H Sillen13, Martijn Vooijs14,15, Jan Custers15, Jean Muris16, Daniel Langer17, Jos Donkers18, Marleen Bregman19, Leendert Tissink20, Erik Bergkamp21, Johan Wempe22, Sarah Houben-Wilke13, Ingrid M L Augustin13, Eline Bij de Vaate23, Frits F M Franssen13,24,25, Dirk Van Ranst26, Hester Van der Vaart27, Jeanine Antons28, Mitchell Van Doormaal6, Eleonore H Koolen5, Philip Van der Wees29, Renée Van Snippenburg30, Daisy J A Janssen13,31, Sami Simons24.
Abstract
A loss of physical functioning (i.e., a low physical capacity and/or a low physical activity) is a common feature in patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD). To date, the primary care physiotherapy and specialized pulmonary rehabilitation are clearly underused, and limited to patients with a moderate to very severe degree of airflow limitation (GOLD stage 2 or higher). However, improved referral rates are a necessity to lower the burden for patients with COPD and for society. Therefore, a multidisciplinary group of healthcare professionals and scientists proposes a new model for referral of patients with COPD to the right type of exercise-based care, irrespective of the degree of airflow limitation. Indeed, disease instability (recent hospitalization, yes/no), the burden of disease (no/low, mild/moderate or high), physical capacity (low or preserved) and physical activity (low or preserved) need to be used to allocate patients to one of the six distinct patient profiles. Patients with profile 1 or 2 will not be referred for physiotherapy; patients with profiles 3-5 will be referred for primary care physiotherapy; and patients with profile 6 will be referred for screening for specialized pulmonary rehabilitation. The proposed Dutch model has the intention to get the right patient with COPD allocated to the right type of exercise-based care and at the right moment.Entities:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32333261 PMCID: PMC7375985 DOI: 10.1007/s40279-020-01286-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sports Med ISSN: 0112-1642 Impact factor: 11.136
The number of reimbursed physiotherapy sessions in primary care for patients with COPD (since January 2019)
| GOLD group Aa | GOLD group Ba | GOLD group Ca | GOLD group Da | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Number of session in the 1st year | 5 | 27 | 70 | 70 |
| Number of sessions in the enduring maintenance phase | 0 | 3 | 52 | 52 |
aForced expiratory volume in the first second (FEV1) < 80% predicted
Fig. 1Flowchart for exercise-based care for patients with COPD. CCQ Clinical COPD Questionnaire, CAT COPD Assessment Test, % % predicted value, st/d steps per day. *During hospital admission patients with COPD should be offered exercise-based physiotherapy in addition to regular respiratory physiotherapy [58]. ‡Frail patients with COPD in the palliative phase of the disease, those who are on the waiting list for lung transplantation, those who are on long-term oxygen therapy, those who are on non-invasive ventilation, and/or those with comorbidities which seriously affect physical capacity/activity. †Patients who are willing to pay out of pocket. Gray area: two 1-h pre-treatment screening sessions to do an intake, and to assess physical capacity and physical activity (as described in the text). Patients who are do not enter a pulmonary rehabilitation program after the screening, will be referred for exercise-based primary care, according to the described profiling 2–5
The number of reimbursed physiotherapy sessions in primary care for patients with profiles 3, 4 or 5 according to the proposed 2020 Dutch model
| Patient profile 3a | Patient profile 4a | Patient profile 5a | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Pre-treatment screening sessions | 2 days, 2 consecutive sessions/day | 2 days, 2 consecutive sessions/day | 2 days, 2 consecutive sessions/day |
| Number of weeks, treatment sessions per week | 6 weeks, 2x/week 6 weeks, 1x/week | 12 weeks, 3x/week | 12 weeks, 3x/week |
| Intermediate evaluation sessions (12 weeks after start of therapy) | 2 days, 2 consecutive sessions/day | 2 days, 2 consecutive sessions/day | 2 days, 2 consecutive sessions/day |
| Number of weeks, treatment sessions per week | 18 weeks, 1x/2 weeks 12 weeks, 1x/4 weeks | 14 weeks, 1x/week | 14 weeks, 1x/week 18 weeks, 1x/2 weeks, 1x/4 weeks |
| Post-treatment evaluation session | 2 days, 2 consecutive sessions/day | 2 days, 2 consecutive sessions/day | 2 days, 2 consecutive sessions/day |
| Total number of sessions | 42 | 62 | 74 |
One session = 30 min
aWe propose that GOLD stage 1 patients are also eligible for exercise-related care, as described Fig. 1; after a physician-treated COPD exacerbation, the profiling re-starts from the top of Fig. 1 and the number of sessions start from zero. Obviously, patients need to be encouraged to continue physical activity and/or training in and/or near their home-environment when the number of supervised physiotherapy sessions is decreasing
Fig. 2a Physical capacity in patients with COPD after stratification for patient profile (2–5) and GOLD group (B or D). b Physical activity in patients with COPD after stratification for patient profile (2–5) and GOLD group (B or D). 6MWD 6 min walk distance, GOLD Global initiative for chronic Obstructive Lung Disease.
Data are derived from a secondary analysis of the data of Koolen et al. [3]
Eligibility criteria for an interdisciplinary pulmonary rehabilitation program in a Centre of Expertise for Patients with Complex Chronic Lung Disease
| Domain | Test | Criterion |
|---|---|---|
| Care dependency | Care Dependency Scale | ≤ 68 points [ |
| Body composition | Body weight | An unintentional loss in body weight of ≥ 5 kg in the last 12 months [ |
| Body mass index | < 18.5 kg/m2 or > 35 kg/m2 | |
| Fat-free mass index | < 17 kg/m2 (men) or < 15 kg/m2 (women) [ | |
| Physical capacity | 6-min walk distance | < 350 m [ |
| Incremental shuttle walk distance | 70% predicted | |
| Mobility and balance | Short Physical Performance Battery | ≤ 9 points [ |
| Symptoms of dyspnoea | Modified Medical Research Council | Grade ≥ 2 [ |
| Symptoms of fatigue | Checklist Individual Strength—fatigue domain | ≥ 36 points [ |
| Symptoms of anxiety | Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale | ≥ 10 points on anxiety scale [ |
| Symptoms of depression | Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale | ≥ 10 points on depression scale [ |
| Adaptation to the disease burden | Nijmegen COPD Screening Instrument (NCSI) | Severe disease burden combined with ‘not adapted’ or ‘at risk’ [ |
| Severe hypercapnia | Arterial blood gases | PaCO2 > 7.0 kPa |
| Cardiovascular comorbidities | Patient’s file | Under the care of a cardiologist |
| Exercise-induced oxygen desaturation despite providing O2-supplementation | Transcutaneous SpO2 | < 90% |
| To date, use of primary care physiotherapy or specialized pulmonary rehabilitation programs is very limited in patients with COPD (5.0 and 0.2%, respectively), while a larger proportion of these patients clearly qualify for this type of care. |
| The current organization of Dutch healthcare needs to make a transition towards an adequate referral of patients with COPD to the different types of exercise-based care, including a healthy lifestyle advise, physiotherapy and/or specialized pulmonary rehabilitation programs. |
| Disease stability, disease burden, physical capacity and physical activity are important traits to get the right patient allocated to the right type of exercise-related care and at the right moment, irrespective of the degree of airflow limitation. |