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P1169 : Outcome indicators in primary sclerosing cholangitis: Interim analysis of the value-based medicine in hepatology study

Authors :
Fabris, L
Ciaccio, A
Okolicsanyi, S
Rota, M
Cortesi, P
Buonocore, M
Gemma, M
Giani, P
Belli, L
Fagiuoli, S
Scalone, L
Valsecchi, M
Mantovani, L
Strazzabosco, M
CIACCIO, ANTONIO
OKOLICSANYI, STEFANO
ROTA, MATTEO
CORTESI, PAOLO ANGELO
GEMMA, MARTA
SCALONE, LUCIANA
VALSECCHI, MARIA GRAZIA
MANTOVANI, LORENZO GIOVANNI
STRAZZABOSCO, MARIO
Fabris, L
Ciaccio, A
Okolicsanyi, S
Rota, M
Cortesi, P
Buonocore, M
Gemma, M
Giani, P
Belli, L
Fagiuoli, S
Scalone, L
Valsecchi, M
Mantovani, L
Strazzabosco, M
CIACCIO, ANTONIO
OKOLICSANYI, STEFANO
ROTA, MATTEO
CORTESI, PAOLO ANGELO
GEMMA, MARTA
SCALONE, LUCIANA
VALSECCHI, MARIA GRAZIA
MANTOVANI, LORENZO GIOVANNI
STRAZZABOSCO, MARIO
Publication Year :
2015

Abstract

Background and Aims: Primary sclerosing cholangitis (PSC) is an enigmatic disease with scarce therapeutic options, potentially evolving to severe and life-threatening complications, including malignancies like cholangiocarcinoma (CCA) or colon cancer. The clinical management of PSC remains challenging and may benefit from identification of outcome indicators to assess the quality of care. This study aims to: (A) identify Outcome Indicators (OIs) for PSC, and (B) validate OIs in a clinical context with a preliminary interim analysis. Methods: (A) A panel of experts generated a list of OIs using a modified version of the Delphi method. (B) OIs with the highest RAND/UCLA score were tested in an ongoing multicentric and prospective study (Value-based Medicine in Hepatology, VBMH). Results: Five OIs were identified on the basis of the highest rating values and disagreement indexes next to 0. They include: annual rate of acute cholangitis episodes (OI#1); mortality rate for patients not yet listed for liver transplantation (OI#2); rate of quality of life improvement, measured by EQ-VAS (a visual assessment scale ranging from 0 to 100 where the patient points out his present-day health status) and EQ-5D (assessment of 5 domains that measure daily performance according to 3 levels of severity) (OI#3); number of patients died for CCA and CRC (OI#4); incidence and/or worsening of osteoporosis, expressed as T-score differential over a 2-year interval (OI#5). In the validation study, 63 consecutive patients with PSC enrolled in 3 tertiary liver centres in Northern Italy were evaluated for a 24-month follow-up period. For each OI, the following values were reported: OI#1: cumulative incidence of 5.2%, resulting in 0.029 cholangitis/patient; OI#2, OI#4: no patients died without being listed for transplantation or because of cancer during study time; OI#3: 38.9% and 19.4% of patients showed an improvement in EQ-VAS and EQ-5D parameters, respectively; OI#5: 3% of patients developed

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
STAMPA, English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1308914836
Document Type :
Electronic Resource