Identifying and managing psoriasis-associated comorbidities: the IMPACT research programme
- PMID: 35377573
- Bookshelf ID: NBK579288
- DOI: 10.3310/LVUQ5853
Identifying and managing psoriasis-associated comorbidities: the IMPACT research programme
Excerpt
Background: Psoriasis is a common, lifelong inflammatory skin disease, the severity of which can range from limited disease involving a small body surface area to extensive skin involvement. It is associated with high levels of physical and psychosocial disability and a range of comorbidities, including cardiovascular disease, and it is currently incurable.
Objectives: To (1) confirm which patients with psoriasis are at highest risk of developing additional long-term conditions and identify service use and costs to patient, (2) apply knowledge about risk of comorbid disease to the development of targeted screening services to reduce risk of further disease, (3) learn how patients with psoriasis cope with their condition and about their views of service provision, (4) identify the barriers to provision of best care for patients with psoriasis and (5) develop patient self-management resources and staff training packages to improve the lives of people with psoriasis.
Design: Mixed methods including two systematic reviews, one population cohort study, one primary care screening study, one discrete choice study, four qualitative studies and three mixed-methodology studies.
Setting: Primary care, secondary care and online surveys.
Participants: People with psoriasis and health-care professionals who manage patients with psoriasis.
Results: Prevalence rates for psoriasis vary by geographical location. Incidence in the UK was estimated to be between 1.30% and 2.60%. Knowledge about the cost-effectiveness of therapies is limited because high-quality clinical comparisons of interventions have not been done or involve short-term follow-up. After adjusting for known cardiovascular risk factors, psoriasis (including severe forms) was not found to be an independent risk factor for major cardiovascular events; however, co-occurrence of inflammatory arthritis was a risk factor. Traditional risk factors were high in patients with psoriasis. Large numbers of patients with suboptimal management of known risk factors were found by screening patients in primary care. Risk information was seldom discussed with patients as part of screening consultations, meaning that a traditional screening approach may not be effective in reducing comorbidities associated with psoriasis. Gaps in training of health-care practitioners to manage psoriasis effectively were identified, including knowledge about risk factors for comorbidities and methods of facilitating behavioural change. Theory-based, high-design-quality patient materials broadened patient understanding of psoriasis and self-management. A 1-day training course based on motivational interviewing principles was effective in increasing practitioner knowledge and changing consultation styles. The primary economic analysis indicated a high level of uncertainty. Sensitivity analysis indicated some situations when the interventions may be cost-effective. The interventions need to be assessed for long-term (cost-)effectiveness.
Limitations: The duration of patient follow-up in the study of cardiovascular disease was relatively short; as a result, future studies with longer follow-up are recommended.
Conclusions: Recognition of the nature of the psoriasis and its impact, knowledge of best practice and guideline use are all limited in those most likely to provide care for the majority of patients. Patients and practitioners are likely to benefit from the provision of appropriate support and/or training that broadens understanding of psoriasis as a complex condition and incorporates support for appropriate health behaviour change. Both interventions were feasible and acceptable to patients and practitioners. Cost-effectiveness remains to be explored.
Future work: Patient support materials have been created for patients and NHS providers. A 1-day training programme with training materials for dermatologists, specialist nurses and primary care practitioners has been designed. Spin-off research projects include a national study of responses to psoriasis therapy and a global study of the prevalence and incidence of psoriasis. A new clinical service is being developed locally based on the key findings of the Identification and Management of Psoriasis Associated ComorbidiTy (IMPACT) programme.
Funding: This project was funded by the National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) Programme Grants for Applied Research programme and will be published in full in Programme Grants for Applied Research; Vol. 10, No. 3. See the NIHR Journals Library website for further project information.
Copyright © 2022 Cordingley et al. This work was produced by Cordingley et al. under the terms of a commissioning contract issued by the Secretary of State for Health and Social Care. This is an Open Access publication distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution CC BY 4.0 licence, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, reproduction and adaption in any medium and for any purpose provided that it is properly attributed. See: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/. For attribution the title, original author(s), the publication source – NIHR Journals Library, and the DOI of the publication must be cited.
Sections
- Plain English summary
- Scientific summary
- SYNOPSIS
- Epidemiology of psoriasis and its association with risk of cardiovascular disease
- Cardiovascular risk in patients with psoriasis: screening study and pulse wave velocity measures in people with psoriasis
- Cardiovascular disease risk communication and reduction in psoriasis
- Coping with psoriasis: learning from patients
- Understanding the professional role in supporting lifestyle change in patients with psoriasis
- Psoriasis and Wellbeing (PSO WELL): developing patient materials to broaden understanding of psoriasis as a long-term condition, psoriasis-associated comorbidities and the role of self-management
- Psoriasis and Wellbeing (PSO WELL): developing a patient-centred approach using motivational interviewing skills with dermatology clinicians to support healthy living in people with psoriasis
- Valuing the interventions with a stated preference survey
- Health economics modelling of costs of interventions for people with psoriasis
- Patient, public and practitioner involvement in the IMPACT programme
- Tales from the heart and the head: lessons from the IMPACT programme
- Acknowledgements
- References
- Appendix 1. Selection criteria and data extraction forms used for systematic review of economic evaluations
- Appendix 2. Characteristics of practices participating in workstream 2 screening study
- Appendix 3. Results from pulse wave velocity study
- Appendix 4. PhD thesis abstract: risk communication and lifestyle behaviour change in people with psoriasis
- Appendix 5. The dermatology specialist nurse survey of lifestyle management
- Appendix 6. Patient Readiness to Engage in Health Information Technology survey: responses from 127 individuals
- Appendix 7. Recruitment advert for PSO WELL Training
- Appendix 8. Detailed methods and results of the stated preference survey
- Appendix 9. Stated preference survey materials
- Appendix 10. Economic model development and International Society for Pharmacoeconomics and Outcomes Research checklist
- Appendix 11. Economic model structure, components, assumptions and results
- Appendix 12. The IMPACT programme steering committee: patient representative terms of reference
- List of abbreviations
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