Kroon Féline P B, van der Burg Lennart R A, Buchbinder Rachelle, Osborne Richard H, Johnston Renea V, Pitt Veronica
Department of Rheumatology, Leiden University Medical Center, Leiden, Netherlands.
Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2014 Jan 15;2014(1):CD008963. doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD008963.pub2.
Self-management education programmes are complex interventions specifically targeted at patient education and behaviour modification. They are designed to encourage people with chronic disease to take an active self-management role to supplement medical care and improve outcomes.
To assess the effectiveness of self-management education programmes for people with osteoarthritis.
The Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials (CENTRAL), MEDLINE, EMBASE, PyscINFO, SCOPUS and the World Health Organization (WHO) International Clinical Trial Registry Platform were searched, without language restriction, on 17 January 2013. We checked references of reviews and included trials to identify additional studies.
Randomised controlled trials of self-management education programmes in people with osteoarthritis were included. Studies with participants receiving passive recipients of care and studies comparing one type of programme versus another were excluded.
In addition to standard methods we extracted components of the self-management interventions using the eight domains of the Health Education Impact Questionnaire (heiQ), and contextual and participant characteristics using PROGRESS-Plus and the Health Literacy Questionnaire (HLQ). Outcomes included self-management of osteoarthritis, participant's positive and active engagement in life, pain, global symptom score, self-reported function, quality of life and withdrawals (including dropouts and those lost to follow-up). We assessed the quality of the body of evidence for these outcomes using the GRADE approach.
We included twenty-nine studies (6,753 participants) that compared self-management education programmes to attention control (five studies), usual care (17 studies), information alone (four studies) or another intervention (seven studies). Although heterogeneous, most interventions included elements of skill and technique acquisition (94%), health-directed activity (85%) and self-monitoring and insight (79%); social integration and support were addressed in only 12%. Most studies did not provide enough information to assess all PROGRESS-Plus items. Eight studies included predominantly Caucasian, educated female participants, and only four provided any information on participants' health literacy. All studies were at high risk of performance and detection bias for self-reported outcomes; 20 studies were at high risk of selection bias, 16 were at high risk of attrition bias, two were at high risk of reporting bias and 12 were at risk of other biases. We deemed attention control as the most appropriate and thus the main comparator.Compared with attention control, self-management programmes may not result in significant benefits at 12 months. Low-quality evidence from one study (344 people) indicates that self-management skills were similar in active and control groups: 5.8 points on a 10-point self-efficacy scale in the control group, and the mean difference (MD) between groups was 0.4 points (95% confidence interval (CI) -0.39 to 1.19). Low-quality evidence from four studies (575 people) indicates that self-management programmes may lead to a small but clinically unimportant reduction in pain: the standardised mean difference (SMD) between groups was -0.26 (95% CI -0.44 to -0.09); pain was 6 points on a 0 to 10 visual analogue scale (VAS) in the control group, treatment resulted in a mean reduction of 0.8 points (95% CI -0.14 to -0.3) on a 10-point scale, with number needed to treat for an additional beneficial outcome (NNTB) of 8 (95% CI 5 to 23). Low-quality evidence from one study (251 people) indicates that the mean global osteoarthritis score was 4.2 on a 0 to 10-point symptom scale (lower better) in the control group, and treatment reduced symptoms by a mean of 0.14 points (95% CI -0.54 to 0.26). This result does not exclude the possibility of a clinically important benefit in some people (0.5 point reduction included in 95% CI). Low-quality evidence from three studies (574 people) showed no signficant difference in function between groups (SMD -0.19, 95% CI -0.5 to 0.11); mean function was 1.29 points on a 0 to 3-point scale in the control group, and treatment resulted in a mean improvement of 0.04 points with self-management (95% CI -0.10 to 0.02). Low-quality evidence from one study (165 people) showed no between-group difference in quality of life (MD -0.01, 95% CI -0.03 to 0.01) from a control group mean of 0.57 units on 0 to 1 well-being scale. Moderate-quality evidence from five studies (937 people) shows similar withdrawal rates between self-management (13%) and control groups (12%): RR 1.11 (95% CI 0.78 to 1.57). Positive and active engagement in life was not measured.Compared with usual care, moderate-quality evidence from 11 studies (up to 1,706 participants) indicates that self-management programmes probably provide small benefits up to 21 months, in terms of self-management skills, pain, osteoarthritis symptoms and function, although these are of doubtful clinical importance, and no improvement in positive and active engagement in life or quality of life. Withdrawal rates were similar. Low to moderate quality evidence indicates no important differences in self-management , pain, symptoms, function, quality of life or withdrawal rates between self-management programmes and information alone or other interventions (exercise, physiotherapy, social support or acupuncture).
AUTHORS' CONCLUSIONS: Low to moderate quality evidence indicates that self-management education programmes result in no or small benefits in people with osteoarthritis but are unlikely to cause harm.Compared with attention control, these programmes probably do not improve self-management skills, pain, osteoarthritis symptoms, function or quality of life, and have unknown effects on positive and active engagement in life. Compared with usual care, they may slightly improve self-management skills, pain, function and symptoms, although these benefits are of unlikely clinical importance.Further studies investigating the effects of self-management education programmes, as delivered in the trials in this review, are unlikely to change our conclusions substantially, as confounding from biases across studies would have likely favoured self-management. However, trials assessing other models of self-management education programme delivery may be warranted. These should adequately describe the intervention they deliver and consider the expanded PROGRESS-Plus framework and health literacy, to explore issues of health equity for recipients.
自我管理教育项目是专门针对患者教育和行为改变的复杂干预措施。其旨在鼓励慢性病患者积极发挥自我管理作用,以补充医疗护理并改善治疗效果。
评估自我管理教育项目对骨关节炎患者的有效性。
于2013年1月17日检索了Cochrane对照试验中央注册库(CENTRAL)、MEDLINE、EMBASE、心理学文摘数据库(PsycINFO)、Scopus数据库以及世界卫生组织(WHO)国际临床试验注册平台,检索无语言限制。我们检查了综述和纳入试验的参考文献,以识别其他研究。
纳入骨关节炎患者自我管理教育项目的随机对照试验。排除参与者接受被动护理的研究以及比较一种项目与另一种项目的研究。
除标准方法外,我们使用健康教育影响问卷(heiQ)的八个领域提取自我管理干预的组成部分,并使用PROGRESS-Plus和健康素养问卷(HLQ)提取背景和参与者特征。结局包括骨关节炎的自我管理、参与者对生活的积极参与、疼痛、总体症状评分、自我报告的功能、生活质量以及退出情况(包括退出研究和失访)。我们使用GRADE方法评估这些结局的证据质量。
我们纳入了29项研究(6753名参与者),这些研究将自我管理教育项目与注意力控制组(5项研究)、常规护理组(17项研究)、单纯信息组(4项研究)或其他干预措施组(7项研究)进行了比较。尽管各研究存在异质性,但大多数干预措施包括技能和技术获取(94%)、健康指导活动(85%)以及自我监测和洞察(79%)等要素;仅有12%涉及社会融合与支持。大多数研究未提供足够信息以评估所有PROGRESS-Plus项目。8项研究的参与者主要为受过教育的白人女性,只有4项研究提供了有关参与者健康素养的任何信息。所有研究在自我报告结局的实施和检测偏倚方面风险较高;20项研究在选择偏倚方面风险较高,16项研究在失访偏倚方面风险较高,2项研究在报告偏倚方面风险较高,12项研究存在其他偏倚风险。我们认为注意力控制组是最合适的,因此作为主要对照。与注意力控制组相比,自我管理项目在12个月时可能不会带来显著益处。一项研究(344人)的低质量证据表明,干预组和对照组的自我管理技能相似:对照组在10分制自我效能量表上得分为5.8分,两组的平均差值(MD)为0.4分(95%置信区间(CI)-0.39至1.19)。四项研究(575人)的低质量证据表明,自我管理项目可能会使疼痛略有减轻,但在临床上无重要意义:两组的标准化平均差值(SMD)为-0.26(95%CI -0.44至-0.09);对照组在0至10视觉模拟量表(VAS)上的疼痛评分为6分,治疗后在10分制量表上平均降低0.8分(95%CI -0.14至-0.3),额外获得有益结局所需治疗人数(NNTB)为8(95%CI 5至23)。一项研究(251人)的低质量证据表明,对照组在0至10分症状量表(分数越低越好)上的骨关节炎总体平均评分为4.2分,治疗后症状平均减轻0.14分(95%CI -0.54至0.26)。该结果不排除在某些人身上有临床重要益处的可能性(95%CI包括降低0.5分)。三项研究(574人)的低质量证据显示,两组在功能方面无显著差异(SMD -0.19,95%CI -0.5至0.11);对照组在0至3分制量表上的平均功能评分为1.29分,自我管理治疗后平均改善0.04分(95%CI -0.10至0.02)。一项研究(165人)的低质量证据显示,对照组在0至1幸福感量表上的平均生活质量评分为0.57分,两组在生活质量方面无组间差异(MD -0.01,95%CI -0.03至0.01)。五项研究(937人)的中等质量证据表明,自我管理组(13%)和对照组(12%)的退出率相似:相对危险度(RR)为1.11(95%CI 0.78至1.57)。未对生活中的积极参与情况进行测量。与常规护理相比,11项研究(多达1706名参与者)的中等质量证据表明,自我管理项目在长达21个月的时间里,在自我管理技能、疼痛、骨关节炎症状和功能方面可能会带来微小益处,尽管这些益处的临床重要性存疑,且在生活中的积极参与或生活质量方面无改善。退出率相似。低至中等质量证据表明,自我管理项目与单纯信息组或其他干预措施(运动、物理治疗、社会支持或针灸)在自我管理、疼痛、症状、功能、生活质量或退出率方面无重要差异。
低至中等质量证据表明,自我管理教育项目对骨关节炎患者无益处或仅有微小益处,但不太可能造成伤害。与注意力控制组相比,这些项目可能无法改善自我管理技能、疼痛、骨关节炎症状、功能或生活质量,对生活中的积极参与情况影响未知。与常规护理相比,它们可能会略微改善自我管理技能、疼痛、功能和症状,尽管这些益处的临床重要性不大。进一步研究本综述中试验所实施的自我管理教育项目的效果,不太可能大幅改变我们的结论,因为研究间的偏倚混杂因素可能有利于自我管理。然而,评估其他自我管理教育项目实施模式的试验可能是必要的。这些试验应充分描述所实施的干预措施,并考虑扩展的PROGRESS-Plus框架和健康素养,以探讨接受者的健康公平问题。