Current and Optimal Practices in Childhood Asthma Monitoring Among Multiple International Stakeholders.
Journal
JAMA network open
ISSN: 2574-3805
Titre abrégé: JAMA Netw Open
Pays: United States
ID NLM: 101729235
Informations de publication
Date de publication:
01 05 2023
01 05 2023
Historique:
medline:
15
5
2023
pubmed:
12
5
2023
entrez:
12
5
2023
Statut:
epublish
Résumé
Childhood asthma control largely depends on rigorous and regular monitoring. Although various clinical parameters, biomarkers, and patient-reported outcomes are helpful for monitoring purposes, there is no consensus on the minimum and/or optimal set of parameters and their relative priority. To assess actual and perceived optimal childhood asthma monitoring practices used globally. This international, multistakeholder survey study surveyed health care professionals and clinical academics with a professional interest in and exposure to childhood asthma between April 12 and September 3, 2021, to test for differences between the frequency that different techniques are actually used in practice vs optimal practice, between-group differences, and differences across medical settings and country economies. Outcomes were frequency of duration of asthma monitoring visits as well as actual and perceived optimal use and importance of monitoring tools and domains. A total of 1319 participants with expertise in childhood asthma from 88 countries completed the survey. Participants included 1228 health care professionals with a balanced distribution across different care settings (305 [22.7%] primary care, 401 [29.9%] secondary, and 522 [38.9%] tertiary care) and 91 researchers. Children with mild to moderate asthma attended regular monitoring visits at a median (IQR) of 5.0 (2.5-8.0) months, with visits lasting a median (IQR) of 25 (15-25) minutes, whereas severe asthma required more frequent visits (median [IQR], 2.5 [1.0-2.5] months; median [IQR] duration, 25 [25-35] minutes). Monitoring of symptoms and control, adherence, comorbidities, lung function, medication adverse effects, and allergy were considered to be very high or high priority by more than 75% of the respondents. Different patterns emerged when assessing differences between actual and perceived optimal use of monitoring tools. For some tools, current and optimal practices did not differ much (eg, spirometry), whereas in others, there was considerable space for improvement (eg, standardized control and adherence tests). The largest gap was observed for between-visit monitoring with electronic trackers, apps, and smart devices. Differences across country economies, care settings, and medical specialties were modest. These survey results suggest that pediatric asthma monitoring is performed generally homogeneously worldwide, in most cases following evidence-based standards. Wider use of standardized instruments and the intensification of continuous between-visit monitoring, supported by electronic devices, is needed for further improvement of disease outcomes. The results of this survey, in conjunction with the available evidence base, can inform recommendations toward further optimization.
Identifiants
pubmed: 37171821
pii: 2804856
doi: 10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2023.13120
pmc: PMC10182430
doi:
Types de publication
Journal Article
Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
Langues
eng
Sous-ensembles de citation
IM
Pagination
e2313120Subventions
Organisme : Department of Health
Pays : United Kingdom
Investigateurs
Ioana Agache
(I)
Stefania Arasi
(S)
Zeinab Awad Awad El-Sayed
(ZA)
Leonard Bacharier
(L)
Matteo Bonini
(M)
Jose A Castro-Rodriguez
(JA)
Zhimin Chen
(Z)
Michael Clausen
(M)
Timothy Craig
(T)
Zuzana Diamant
(Z)
Francine M Ducharme
(FM)
Philippe Eigenmann
(P)
Wojciech Feleszko
(W)
Vincezo Fierro
(V)
Alessandro Fiocchi
(A)
Luis Garcia-Marcos
(L)
James E Gern
(JE)
Anne Goh
(A)
René Maximiliano Gómez
(R)
Maia Gotua
(M)
Eckard Hamelmann
(E)
Gunilla Hedlin
(G)
Elham M Hossny
(EM)
Zhanat Ispayeva
(Z)
Tuomas Jartti
(T)
Miloš Jeseňák
(M)
Omer Kalayci
(O)
Alan Kaplan
(A)
Jon Konradsen
(J)
Piotr Kuna
(P)
Susanne Lau
(S)
Peter Le Souef
(P)
Robert F Lemanske
(RF)
Mika J Makela
(MJ)
Paolo M Matricardi
(PM)
Oleksandr Mazulov
(O)
Michael Miligkos
(M)
Mário Morais-Almeida
(M)
Clare Murray
(C)
Karthik Nagaraju
(K)
Antonio Nieto Garcia
(A)
Zoltan Novak
(Z)
Ruby Pawankar
(R)
Marielle Pijenburg
(M)
Helena Pite
(H)
Paulo Mc Pitrez
(PM)
Petr Pohunek
(P)
David Price
(D)
Alfred Priftanji
(A)
Valeria Ramiconi
(V)
Daniela Rivero Yeverino
(D)
Graham C Roberts
(GC)
Aziz Sheikh
(A)
Kun-Ling Shen
(KL)
Zsolt Szepfalusi
(Z)
Ioanna Tsiligianni
(I)
Mirjana Turkalj
(M)
Steve Turner
(S)
Tetiana Umanets
(T)
Arunas Valiulis
(A)
Susanne Vijveberg
(S)
Jiu-Yao Wang
(JY)
Ran Wang
(R)
Tonya Winders
(T)
Dong Keon Yon
(DK)
Osman M Yusuf
(OM)
Heather J Zar
(HJ)
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