Scott Ian C, Mangat Navjeet, MacGregor Alex, Raza Karim, Mallen Christian D, Hider Samantha L
Arthritis Research UK Primary Care Centre, Research Institute for Primary Care & Health Sciences, Primary Care Sciences, Keele University, Newcastle-under-Lyme.
Department of Rheumatology, Haywood Hospital, High Lane, Burslem, Staffordshire.
Rheumatol Adv Pract. 2018;2(1):rky012. doi: 10.1093/rap/rky012. Epub 2018 Apr 6.
National guidelines advocate referring patients with persistent synovitis to rheumatology within 3 working days of presentation to primary care. This occurs infrequently. We aimed to identify modifiable barriers to early referral of suspected RA patients among English general practitioners (GPs).
We carried out a national cross-sectional survey of 1388 English GPs (RA Questionnaire for GPs [RA-QUEST] study). Questions addressed GPs' confidence in diagnosing RA, clinical factors influencing RA diagnosis/referral, timeliness of referrals and secondary care access. Data were captured using 10-point visual analog scales, five-point Likert scales, yes/no questions or free text, and were analysed descriptively.
Small joint swelling and pain were most influential in diagnosing RA (91 and 84% rated the importance of these as 4 or 5 on a five-point Likert scale, respectively); investigations including RF (61% rating 4 or 5) and anti-CCP antibody (72% rating 4 or 5) were less influential. Patient history had the greatest impact on the decision to refer (92% rating this 4 or 5 on a 5-point Likert scale), with acute phase markers (74% rating 4 or 5) and serology (76% rating 4 or 5) less impactful. Despite the importance placed on history and examination, only 26% referred suspected RA immediately without investigations; 95% of GPs organizing further tests opted to test for RF.
For suspected RA patients to be referred within 3 days of presentation to primary care there needs to be a paradigm shift in GPs' approaches to making referral decisions, with a focus on clinical history and examination findings, and not the use of investigations such as RF.
国家指南提倡在基层医疗中,疑似持续性滑膜炎的患者应在就诊后3个工作日内转诊至风湿病科。但这种情况很少发生。我们旨在确定英国全科医生(GP)对疑似类风湿关节炎(RA)患者早期转诊存在的可改变障碍。
我们对1388名英国全科医生进行了一项全国性横断面调查(全科医生类风湿关节炎问卷[RA-QUEST]研究)。问题涉及全科医生对诊断类风湿关节炎的信心、影响类风湿关节炎诊断/转诊的临床因素、转诊及时性及二级医疗服务获取情况。数据通过10分视觉模拟量表、5分李克特量表、是/否问题或自由文本采集,并进行描述性分析。
小关节肿胀和疼痛对类风湿关节炎的诊断影响最大(分别有91%和84%的人在5分李克特量表上将其重要性评为4或5);包括类风湿因子(RF,61%评为4或5)和抗环瓜氨酸肽抗体(72%评为4或5)在内的检查影响力较小。患者病史对转诊决定影响最大(92%在5分李克特量表上评为4或5),急性期指标(74%评为4或5)和血清学检查(76%评为4或5)影响较小。尽管病史和检查很重要,但只有26%的人在未进行检查的情况下立即转诊疑似类风湿关节炎患者;95%安排进一步检查的全科医生选择检测类风湿因子。
为使疑似类风湿关节炎患者在基层医疗就诊后3天内得到转诊,全科医生在做出转诊决定时需要进行模式转变,应关注临床病史和检查结果,而非依赖类风湿因子等检查。