COPD Clinical Trial
Official title:
Screening for COPD in Primary Care: a Synergistic Approach - Dentists - Pharmacists -Physiotherapists - Nurses - Physicians
A recent French study conducted in the general population in the north, using more than
12,000 people randomly drawn from the electoral lists, shows a prevalence of nearly 15% of an
obstructive spirometric function disorder; The diagnosis was ignored in 70% of cases. If we
consider the Finistère situation, the mortality data are unfavorable, with an excess of COPD
mortality compared to the French average.
Compared to other frequent chronic conditions, such as high blood pressure or diabetes, the
management of COPD may appear complex for at least two reasons:
- Screening is difficult because of the banality of symptoms and the need for spirometry
to confirm the diagnosis;
- Comorbidities are masking the respiratory pathology; It is on this first point
concerning the difficulty of screening that this project focuses.
It is true that the development of screening strategies for COPD has been the subject of
numerous studies, the results of which are controversial. The target population of smokers
over the age of 40, who are readily selected, is difficult to achieve as a whole because the
use of care is far from homogeneous. Many people do not have a general practitioner.
Recent reviews of COPD screening do not recommend systematic screening for COPD in adults.
However, they emphasize the feasibility of screening by questionnaire and / or portable
spirometry. A selection of patients suspected of exacerbations (patients with at least one
episode labeled "bronchitis") could increase the cost-effectiveness of screening by focusing
on the most severe cases.
In France, the High Authority for Health (HAS), inspired by the work of the WHO (GOLD
programs), offers a simple five-question questionnaire available online for all healthcare
professionals in order to facilitate an indication of screening spirometry, where the
proposed approach combines symptom identification with active smoking. General practitioners
are in this first line of approach for the diagnosis: in fact, the HAS, in its guide of the
"pathway of care of the patient COPD", recommends that the general practitioner can carry out
the spirometric screening. The corresponding pulmonologist intervenes in this course by
completing the explorations and optimizing the management, especially in patients with
frequent exacerbations. This ideal scheme is hampered by the present practical organization,
a minority of general practitioners (10%) practicing in multidisciplinary health centers,
places where the organization of a functional respiratory measurement can be easier.
The current recommendations for smoking cessation allow the coding of this management. It is
global, applicable in primary care. It proposes as a starting point the minimal advice, then
associates medicines of assistance with the stop, cognitive-behavioral therapies and a
prolonged follow-up of the patients after weaning. However, although these comprehensive
management techniques are effective for smoking cessation, it is shown that they are
underutilized in routine practice by health professionals with low patient participation
rates. This is noticed, whereas the application of the minimum board alone would allow about
200 000 people to have access to weaning every year.
In a complementary way, the performance of a functional respiratory test in the active
smoking patient has been proposed as a full-fledged tool for the weaning assistance process.
Analysis of the literature, however, yields discordant results. Two recent studies have
revived the debate: they highlight the potential of spirometry as a communication medium in
the context of smoking cessation (using pulmonary age) by confronting patients with the
discovery and understanding of their ventilatory disorder obstructive.
Finally, if other health care providers are invited to participate actively in screening,
including pharmacists, their place in this screening strategy has been less valued. In
particular, pharmacists and dentists are required to provide care to patients with little or
no use of the general practitioner: screening for COPD among these patients deserves
consideration. Similarly, nurses occupy a special place, being called in particular to carry
out regular care of patients, both in their office and at home. The administration of
injectable antibiotics in a context of exacerbation of unlikely COPD is a frequent care
opportunity, which may include this more comprehensive approach. Finally, physiotherapists,
who are increasingly trained in the concept of respiratory rehabilitation, are taking charge
of other potentially COPD smokers for other pathologies.
Based on the willingness of Finnish actors to work on a COPD pathway with the help of the
regional health agency, the investigators propose to question the respective place of health
care professionals involved in primary care among potentially COPD patients: Dentists,
nurses, general practitioners, physiotherapists and pharmacists
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