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1 Respiratory Health Services Research Group, Charing Cross Hospital, and 2 Leukocyte Biology Section and Dept of Allergy and Clinical Immunology, NHLI Division, Imperial College London, London, UK.
CORRESPONDENCE: M. R. Partridge, Respiratory Health Services Research Group, NHLI Division, Imperial College London, Charing Cross Hospital, St Dunstans Road, London, W6 8RP, UK. Fax: 44 2088467999. E-mail: m.partridge{at}imperial.ac.uk
Keywords: Delivery of care, difficult asthma, liaison psychiatry
Received: January 11, 2006
Accepted June 16, 2006
| ABSTRACT |
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A postal survey of 683 consultant members of the British Thoracic Society designed to elicit respondents' views on how they would manage four clinical scenarios was conducted.
There was a 50.4% response rate. Few reported a uniform approach to the investigation of such patients. The availability of allied healthcare professionals was variable. The 21 consultant respiratory physicans, reporting a special interest in difficult asthma, were significantly more likely to objectively assess compliance, perform skin-prick tests and to utilise a liaison psychiatrist than those without an expressed special interest in asthma. Many reported difficulty in accessing psychologists, liaison psychiatrists and social workers. Approaches to the diagnosis and management of "vocal cord dysfunction" were variable.
The results of this postal survey of specialist thoracic physicians in the UK suggest that a protocol for difficult asthma is not in widespread use and that access to necessary allied healthcare professionals is not uniform. Pulmonologists with a declared special interest in difficult asthma may have configured their services and approaches more in line with that proposed by the European Respiratory Society Task Force.
In 1998, a European Respiratory Society (ERS) Task Force on difficult/therapy-resistant asthma called for an integrated approach to define clinical phenotypes, evaluate risk factors, understand pathophysiology and find novel therapies 1. Subsequently, the European Network for Understanding Mechanisms of Severe Asthma (ENFUMOSA) study group 2 have published details of 163 subjects with severe asthma, who have been carefully studied, and compared those with 158 milder-controlled patients with asthma; the Outcomes and Treatment Regimens (TENOR) study shows similar data from the USA 3. The ERS Task Force specifically recommended the use of a protocol for evaluating patients with difficult asthma, which suggested a number of assessments and investigations that should be undertaken for these patients, including, for example, psychological assessment. Similarly, a protocol approach had been recommended from the USA as long ago as 1993 4. Subsequently, results from single centres of the value of a systematic assessment of these patients have shown the advantages of such an approach in detecting misdiagnosis, significant major psychiatric comorbidity and high rates of nonadherence with oral steroid therapy 5. Others have subsequently shown that such an approach reveals that approximately only half (46.5%) of cases had truly therapy-resistant asthma 6.
Most national and international guidelines on the management of asthma do not address the issue of difficult asthma, although one group has recently published specific recommendations 7. The size of the problem is not known, but the burden for the individual and healthcare system is likely to be considerable. Many patients requiring unscheduled healthcare do so in a repetitive manner 8. Resource utilisation is approximately three times higher in patients with poorly controlled severe asthma, compared with well-controlled, persistent asthma 9 and these patients incur significant indirect costs due to time off work 10.
Within the group of people with difficult asthma, there will be some in whom there is significant comorbidity, some in whom the diagnosis is erroneous, some who have significant psychological problems and some who fail to benefit from therapy as a result of noncompliance.
| METHODS |
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The questionnaire consisted of five parts; the first four parts concerned case histories of difficult asthma and a fifth section was designed to elicit information about the respondents place of work.
The case studies were based upon cases seen previously by the authors, but altered and made anonymous. Case 1 concerned a patient with multiple admissions and episodes of mechanical ventilation who was on maximal therapy. Respondents were asked to tick a list of investigations they would perform on the majority of patients of this type. Case 2 was designed to elicit the pattern of services available to patients with difficult asthma and concerned a student with asthma that had recently worsened despite maximal therapies. The respondent was asked to record which other health professionals were physically present in their clinic at the time of referral and who was easily available by onward referral within 2 or 3 weeks. Case 3 was designed to elicit a list of differential diagnoses and concerned a young male with asthma since early childhood, who had never been fully investigated because of severe anxiety and needle phobia. Respondents were asked to list five possible alternative diagnoses and also to list the three most common misdiagnoses they had seen in patients attending with asthma. They were also asked to list the most unusual diagnosis they have ever made in somebody originally labelled as having difficult asthma. Case 4 concerned a young female with asthma who had had frequent emergency department attendances, and was noted to have extremely variable spirometry and a glottic wheeze. Respondents were asked to state the likely diagnosis and to list which investigations, if any, they used to confirm the diagnosis and to describe who they would most involve in therapy in such a case.
The fifth section elicited information about the clinician completing the questionnaire, including their place of work, whether there was an asthma clinic or difficult asthma clinic in their hospital and whether they were the clinical lead for that condition. They were also asked how many patients with difficult asthma they currently cared for.
Statistical analysis
Variables were treated non-parametrically and analysed using the MannWhitney U-test.
| RESULTS |
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The investigations reported to be undertaken on those with difficult asthma are shown in figure 1
and the availability of health professional colleagues is shown in figure 2
. The five most common differential diagnoses offered for case 3 are shown in figure 3
and the complete list of misdiagnoses reported by respondents to have mimicked difficult asthma is illustrated in table 1
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Numbers of patients with difficult asthma
A total of 280 respondents reported currently caring for a mean of 25.1 patients. The total number of patients under the care of the 280 consultants is 7,027, of whom approximately half (3,635) were under the care of the 21 consultants who declared that they had a special interest in difficult asthma.
Specific clinics for those with asthma or difficult asthma
Forty-eight per cent (140 out of 292) respondents said that in their hospital one consultant was lead on asthma, 55 (39.3%) of whom were the lead on asthma themselves. Out of 293, 122 (41.6%) had a specific clinic in their hospital mainly for people with asthma.
Only 65 out of 287 (22.7%) had a specific clinic for those with difficult asthma in their hospital. Of 284 respondents, 183 (64.4%) answered that there was someone in their regional centre with an interest in difficult asthma and 21 of those 183 (11.4%) were themselves the specialist for difficult asthma.
The responses of the 21 respiratory specialists (table 2tblref>), who reported having a special interest in difficult asthma, were compared with the 152 doctors who reported neither a specialist responsibility for asthma or for difficult asthma. Responses from the former showed a significantly higher use of liaison psychiatric opinion (p = 0.002), prednisolone assays/cortisols (p = 0.028) and use of skin-prick tests for common inhaled allergens and fungi (p = 0.012 and p<0.001 respectively). The most significant results are the increased ease of access from a difficult asthma clinic to a liaison psychiatrist (p = 0.001). The 21 difficult asthma specialists also had a significantly increased number of patients with difficult asthma 173.09±232.7 (mean±SD) compared to the mean 10.43±13.60 cared for by the remaining respiratory physicians.
| DISCUSSION |
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This survey would suggest that if a patient with difficult asthma succeeds in seeing a respiratory specialist with a special interest in their condition, such a physician is more likely to have optimally configured their services. This is important when others 5, 6 have shown high rates of non-adherence with oral steroid therapy and significant psychiatric comorbidity in those with difficult asthma.
The 21 respondents in this study who reported that they had a special interest in difficult asthma were more likely to undertake allergy testing, assess compliance with drug assays and utilise psychiatric opinions. Respondents who did not express a special interest in difficult asthma report that access to liaison psychiatrists, psychologists and social workers was poor. It seems unlikely that the complex psychological problems sometimes suffered by these patients, and the risks resulting from such comorbidity 11 can be properly managed without good liaison psychiatry and psychology services. Those with a specialist interest in difficult asthma were also far more likely to routinely perform skin-prick test reactions for fungi than the generalists, and positive reactions to fungi have been reported to be more common amongst those with potentially fatal asthma 12, although whether the process of identifying hypersensitivity to fungi affects outcomes is unclear. Even amongst those who report a special interest in difficult asthma, it was only a minority who objectively tested patient compliance with medication.
In addition to the problems of noncompliance and psychological comorbidity, the wide differential diagnosis of difficult asthma was also highlighted by this survey. The list of diseases that were reported as masquerading as difficult asthma also emphasises the importance of differentiating localised airway obstruction from generalised obstruction. Some examples of misdiagnosis reported in this survey were of fixed structural localised obstructions, such as tumours or post-tracheostomy stenosis, but some were functional. The problem of vocal cord dysfunction (also known as glottic wheezing or functional upper airway obstruction) was well recognised by respondents and the condition is common. In one emergency department study, it was shown that 22% of patients attending with wheezing had vocal cord dysfunction 13. However, there seems to be little consensus on the optimal method of confirming the diagnosis, if such confirmation is needed, and even less consensus on management. This probably reflects omission of the subject from guidelines as none of the major national or international guidelines include the subject of vocal cord dysfunction. It has been included in a recent European Respiratory Monograph 14, which considered a number of diagnostic tests and suggested that direct examination of vocal cords is diagnostic, revealing characteristic adduction of the vocal cords in association with wheezing. However, this may be present only intermittently. That particular issue of the European Respiratory Monograph 14 recognises that management consists of reassurance, which can be difficult, particularly when the condition co-exists with asthma. Psychiatric assessment is reported to be necessary and speech therapy useful 14.
The current survey cannot reveal the size of the problem of difficult asthma, but 7,000 patients with this diagnosis were reported as being under the care of British respiratory physicians; this is likely to be an underestimation. The full range of investigations and services necessary for these complex patients does not appear to be available in every respiratory service, and there may be advantages in these patients being referred to a specific "difficult asthma clinic". This should permit better characterisation of these patients, an enhanced understanding and a more rational approach to the evaluation of therapies and interventions. It can then be studied whether such optimisation of the process of care is associated with improved outcomes. The subject of difficult asthma also needs to be specifically addressed within national and international guidelines; this would demonstrate the importance of the subject and highlight gaps in the evidence, which should provide an added impetus for further research.
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| FOOTNOTES |
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| REFERENCES |
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This article has been cited by other articles:
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M. R. Partridge Examining the unmet need in adults with severe asthma Eur. Respir. Rev., September 1, 2007; 16(104): 67 - 72. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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P. Chanez and P. Godard Is difficult asthma still clinically meaningful? Eur. Respir. J., November 1, 2006; 28(5): 897 - 899. [Full Text] [PDF] |
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