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This study will look at the impact of care delivery by a specialist respiratory doctor compared to general practitioners for patients with COPD in East Birmingham. The primary outcome will be to compare the rates of provision of guideline-based care in intervention and control practices.
Full description
This study will look at the impact of care delivery by a specialist respiratory doctor compared to general practitioners for patients with COPD in East Birmingham. It will be run from the Heart of England NHS Foundation Trust, which will provide the specialist input and oversight, and up to 40 practices across the Eastern Birmingham Health Organisation with approximately 2200 patients with COPD confirmed by their current medical practitioner. Each practice will be randomised to either the intervention or control group. The intervention group will have their usual annual COPD review performed by a specialist respiratory doctor at baseline and 12 months. The patients will receive care using our local COPD guidance which has been accepted by all local commissioning groups and secondary care organisations. Treatment will be at the discretion of the clinician and is not specified in the trial protocol. The investigators anticipate that the treatment recommendations in the intervention arm may include referral to pulmonary rehabilitation and reduction in the use of inhaled corticosteroids, which are prescribed at high rates in our locality. The control group will be seen by the usual staff at their practice. These patients will not be seen by the trial team and their data will be extracted remotely using electronic systems.
The primary outcome will be to compare the rates of provision of guideline-based care in intervention and control practices. Secondary outcomes will include: referral to secondary care, unscheduled healthcare consultations (ED attendance, hospital admissions), COPD exacerbations, healthcare costs, medications prescribed, biochemical markers of disease, radiological investigations, lung function tests measured when clinically indicated, and death within 12 month follow-up period.
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Exclusion criteria
• Patients will only be excluded if they are proven not to have COPD at specialist assessment, or during the follow up period, as determined by changes in medical coding within the GP record. If patients are assessed by the specialist and the diagnosis is not felt to be robust, enrolment will be suspended until this matter can be clarified by use of post bronchodilator spirometry and/or other required parts of their clinical care.
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Interventional model
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1,000 participants in 2 patient groups
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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