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Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) stands out among chronic diseases with its high and rising prevalence and mortality, poor quality of life, high re-hospitalization rates and societal burden of care. Current therapeutic and management practices are generally met with limited success. Research in recent years have highlighted the high level of psychiatric co-morbidity in COPD patients, and the major prognostic significance of anxiety/depression in COPD outcomes such as re-hospitalization, smoking cessation, quality of life, and survival. This suggests that addressing psychiatric and psycho-social aspects of care prominent in COPD patients may have strongly positive impact on outcomes, but the available evidence of effectiveness is limited.
The primary aim of the proposed research is to evaluate the effectiveness of a holistic disease management paradigm of psychiatric liaison consultation (CL) that integrates psychiatric and respiratory care to improve outcomes for COPD patients. This integrated psychiatric consultation liaison (IPCL) management paradigm includes the routine screening and structured collaborative care of anxiety and major depressive symptoms and depressive/anxiety disorder in COPD patients. We postulate that the IPCL care paradigm would reduce mood symptoms, increase smoking quit rates, reduce symptom burden and functional disability, and improve quality of life, while reducing rehospitalization, emergency department (ED) and unscheduled physician visits. A secondary aim is to evaluate its cost effectiveness by concurrently collecting resource utilization data.
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Specific Aims
The aim of the proposed research is to evaluate the effectiveness of a holistic disease management paradigm of) that integrates psychiatric and respiratory care (Integrated Psychiatric Consultation Liaison, IPCL) that addresses the high level of psychiatric co-morbidity in COPD patients to improve COPD outcomes.
Methods
Patient population Inpatients and specialist outpatients with established clinical diagnosis of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD).
Settings
Hospital based specialist outpatient and inpatient acute care and step-down care facilities in four hospitals (NUHS, AH, SGH and CGH) and one community hospital (SLH).
The site PIs from each hospital are Lim Tow Keang (NUHS),Loo Chian Min (SGH),K. Narendran (CGH), Gerald Chua (AH) and Tan Boon Yeow (SLH).
Study design Parallel group, randomized, controlled trial.
Eligible individuals are randomly assigned (1:1 ratio) to either:
Baseline screening and assessment. Prior to randomization to either IPCL or UC arm, COPD patients are screened for anxiety /depression using the Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale (HADS, see below for details).21.For patients with high HADS scores(≥8), a semi-structured diagnostic assessment will be immediately performed using Structured Clinical Interview for DSM-IV Axis I Disorders (SCID-I for DSM-IV22 by an advanced practice nurse (APN) and the provisional diagnosis of anxiety and/or major depressive disorder will be confirmed by a psychiatrist, Cases with significant anxiety or depressive symptomatology that do not meet DSM-IV threshold criteria are classified as subsyndromal cases.
Randomization. After informed consent is signed and patient eligibility is confirmed, the patient will be randomized in a 1:1 ratio to either the intervention arm receiving IPCL care or the control arm receiving usual care. Stratification by center is used to ensure balance between the two arms across centers. Random permuted blocks are used to ensure balance over time. The block length is determined by the study statistician. The patient will be assigned an individual number upon randomization. This assigned randomized number will identify the patient and will be used for all documentation for this patient in this study. The list of randomizations will go through Singapore Clinical Research Institute (SCRI). Randomization may be done via the following options: (i) Direct web randomization: Authorized study center personnel will randomize the patient via a password-protected internet web site available 24 hours a day; (ii) Envelope Randomization: In case of web downtime due to technical error, site personnel may randomize patients using the back-up envelopes that will be provided upon activation of the site.
IPCL Care Group For patients who are randomly allocated to the IPCL arm,
Usual Care Control Group. For patients who are randomly allocated to the UC Control Group,
To mimic prevailing conditions of healthcare financing and delivery, payments for referrals to hospital psychiatrists for treatment, drugs and psychotherapy, regardless of allocation to IPCL or UC group, will be borne by the patients using existing avenues of health service financing (Medisave, Medishield, and/or out-of-pockets) as appropriate.
Trial related scheduled assessments of outcome measures All participants in both IPCL and UC control arms will be assessed at baseline, 3 months, 6 months, 9 months and 12 months for the following trial related outcomes. We define loss to follow-up (LTFU) as incomplete ascertainment of the primary outcome for subjects randomized in the trial. Operationally, LTFU is defined as absence from at least 2 consecutive assessments (>6 months).
Statistical Analysis
Primary effectiveness end-points
Secondary effectiveness end points:
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295 participants in 2 patient groups
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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