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Asthma is a common, chronic disease with a high prevalence in children, adolescents and populations normally fit-to-work. Most asthma patients have a well-controlled disease and thereof a low usage of primary and secondary health care, as well as few sick days. With difficult-to-treat and severe asthma, a much higher health care and sick leave resource usage is seen. Previous studies show that only 1/3rd of patients prescribed high-dose, possibly side effect-laden, medications for difficult-to-treat or possible severe asthma have been seen by a specialist, such as a pulmonologist.
Our study aims to identify socioeconomical patterns and describe patients who are in high dosage asthma treatments, without being seen or treated by a specialist. Furthermore, The Investigators wish to investigate the impact of a systematic pulmonary assessment on quality of life, healthcare utilization and social benefit usage in patients with possible severe asthma.
The results are meant to provide a dataset to identify weaknesses in asthma treatment on a national level, and to lay a foundation for future quality improvements to asthma care in Denmark.
Full description
Background & Aim Asthma is the most common chronic disease among children, adolescents and adults. When the diagnosis has been confirmed and the necessary level of treatment established, a well-treated asthma patient is an individual without asthma symptoms. However, asthma is a heterogeneous disease and achieving disease control is far from easy in all asthma patients, although the exact proportion of this problem in real life is unknown. In Denmark, CPR provides the opportunity to track all patients with regard to diagnosis and management, and on a one-by-one basis to merge several informative registers to follow prescribed medication, filled prescriptions, education, area of residence, job, sick leave and referral to secondary care for both asthma and co-morbidities. Based on analysis of data on filled prescriptions from the Danish National Health Service Prescription Database (DNHSPD), it has been demonstrated that only one third of patients classified as having uncontrolled asthma are seen in secondary care.
Based on a nationwide asthma database and clinical confirmation, The Investigators aim to:
Hypotheses & Expected results
Methods
The initial studies are designed as retrospective, observational studies with a real-world evidence, registrybased design. The study period is 1/6-14 to 31/5-18. Databases used are:
The clinical follow-up (reassessment) study is designed as an interventional, non-randomized, non-blinded clinical study with the aim of assessing the effect of systematic asthma assessment (as suggested by the Nordic Severe Asthma Network) on patients with possible severe asthma not seen by a pulmonologist.
Effects are measured as
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Inclusion criteria
Age 18-74 at the time of signing the informed consent form.
Physician diagnosed asthma.
Active treatment
No asthma-related contact to a respiratory medicine outpatient clinic during the last 36 months.
Exclusion criteria
550 participants in 2 patient groups
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Central trial contact
Alma Holm Rovsing, MD
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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