AI Article Synopsis

  • Systematic assessment of severe asthma can enhance diagnosis, identify related health issues, and improve treatment adherence, but its overall effectiveness was previously unverified.
  • This study analyzed 346 patients at UK specialist centers, measuring changes in their demographics, disease characteristics, and healthcare usage over approximately 286 days.
  • Results showed significant reductions in healthcare needs (e.g., fewer emergency visits and hospital admissions), lower oral steroid doses, and marked improvements in quality of life and asthma control scores, indicating that structured assessments can lead to better patient outcomes.

Article Abstract

Background: Systematic assessment of severe asthma can be used to confirm the diagnosis, identify comorbidities, and address adherence to therapy. However, the prospective usefulness of this approach is yet to be established. The objective of this study was to determine whether the systematic assessment of severe asthma is associated with improved quality of life (QoL) and health-care use and, using prospective data collection, to compare relevant outcomes in patients referred with severe asthma to specialist centers across the United Kingdom.

Methods: Data from the National Registry for dedicated UK Difficult Asthma Services were used to compare patient demographics, disease characteristics, and health-care use between initial assessment and a median follow-up of 286 days.

Results: The study population consisted of 346 patients with severe asthma. At follow-up, there were significant reductions in health-care use in terms of primary care or ED visits (66.4% vs 87.8%, P < .0001) and hospital admissions (38% vs 48%, P = .0004). Although no difference was noted in terms of those requiring maintenance oral corticosteroids, there was a reduction in steroid dose (10 mg [8-20 mg] vs 15 mg [10-20 mg], P = .003), and fewer subjects required short-burst steroids (77.4% vs 90.8%, P = .01). Significant improvements were seen in QoL and control using the Asthma Quality of Life Questionnaire and the Asthma Control Questionnaire.

Conclusions: To our knowledge, this is the first time that a prospective study has shown that a systematic assessment at a dedicated severe asthma center is associated with improved QoL and asthma control and a reduction in health-care use and oral steroid burden.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1378/chest.14-3056DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

severe asthma
24
quality life
12
systematic assessment
12
asthma
10
dedicated severe
8
asthma services
8
assessment severe
8
associated improved
8
asthma control
8
health-care
5

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!