Modelling of patient journey in chronic spontaneous urticaria: Increasing awareness and education by shorten patients' disease journey in Germany.
Maurer, Marcus, Augustin, Matthias, Bauer, Sabine, Ekanayake-Bohlig, Swarna, Kircher, Philipp, Knöll, Anja, Kramps, Thomas, Kurzen, Hjalmar, Laemmel, Sonja, Novak, Natalija, Oppel, Eva, Pirouzmandi, Lal, Rebhan, Michael, Reimnitz, Ulrich, Richter-Huhn, Grit, Schwarz, Beate, Schwichtenberg, Uwe, Staubach, Petra, Termeer, Christian, Thielen, Antje, Varga, Katarina, von Bubnoff, Dagmar, Zink, Alexander, Gmeiner, Benjamin and Nathan, Petra (2024) Modelling of patient journey in chronic spontaneous urticaria: Increasing awareness and education by shorten patients' disease journey in Germany. Journal of the European Academy of Dermatology and Venereology : JEADV, 38 (11). pp. 2093-2101. ISSN 1468-3083
Abstract
BACKGROUND
Chronic spontaneous urticaria (CSU) is both physically and emotionally stressful, and guideline recommendations are often not optimally implemented in clinical practice. The objective of this study was to provide an overview on the patient journey in CSU and to develop a mathematical model based on solid data.
METHODS
The journey of CSU patients in Germany was traced through literature review and expert meetings that included medical experts, pharmacists and representatives of patient organizations. The current situation's main challenges in the patient journey (education, collaboration and disease management) were discussed in depth. Then, a probabilistic model was developed in a co-creation approach to simulate the impact of three potential improvement strategies: (1) patient education campaign, (2) medical professional education programme and (3) implementation of a disease management programme (DMP).
RESULTS
Chronic spontaneous urticaria patients are severely burdened by delays in diagnosis and optimal medical care. Our simulation indicates that in Germany, it takes on average of 3.8 years for patients to achieve disease control in Germany. Modelling all three optimization strategies resulted in a reduction to 2.5 years until CSU symptom control. On a population level, the proportion of CSU patients with disease control increased from 44.2% to 58.1%.
CONCLUSIONS
In principle, effective CSU medications and a disease-specific guideline are available. However, implementation of recommendations is lagging in practice. The approach of quantitative modelling of the patient journey validates obstacles and shows a clear effect of multiple interventions on the patient journey. The data generated by our simulation can be used to identify strategies for improving patient care. Our approach might helping in understanding and improving the management of patients beyond CSU.
Item Type: | Article |
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Keywords: | Patient journey, dermatology, computational modeling |
Date Deposited: | 13 Nov 2024 00:45 |
Last Modified: | 13 Nov 2024 00:45 |
URI: | https://oak.novartis.com/id/eprint/55766 |