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Patient profiled data for treatment decision-making:valuable as an add-on to hepatitis C clinical guidelines?

Authors :
Brakenhoff, Sylvia M.
Theijse, Thymen
van Wijngaarden, Peter
Trautwein, Christian
Brozat, Jonathan F.
Tacke, Frank
Honkoop, Pieter
Vanwolleghem, Thomas
Posthouwer, Dirk
Zeuzem, Stefan
Mihm, Ulrike
Wedemeyer, Heiner
Berg, Thomas
Schalm, Solko W.
de Knegt, Robert J.
Brakenhoff, Sylvia M.
Theijse, Thymen
van Wijngaarden, Peter
Trautwein, Christian
Brozat, Jonathan F.
Tacke, Frank
Honkoop, Pieter
Vanwolleghem, Thomas
Posthouwer, Dirk
Zeuzem, Stefan
Mihm, Ulrike
Wedemeyer, Heiner
Berg, Thomas
Schalm, Solko W.
de Knegt, Robert J.
Source :
Brakenhoff , S M , Theijse , T , van Wijngaarden , P , Trautwein , C , Brozat , J F , Tacke , F , Honkoop , P , Vanwolleghem , T , Posthouwer , D , Zeuzem , S , Mihm , U , Wedemeyer , H , Berg , T , Schalm , S W & de Knegt , R J 2024 , ' Patient profiled data for treatment decision-making : valuable as an add-on to hepatitis C clinical guidelines? ' , BMC Medical Informatics and Decision Making , vol. 24 , no. 1 , 227 .
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Background and Aims: Systematic reviews and medical guidelines are widely used in clinical practice. However, these are often not up-to-date and focussed on the average patient. We therefore aimed to evaluate a guideline add-on, TherapySelector (TS), which is based on monthly updated data of all available high-quality studies, classified in specific patient profiles. Methods: We evaluated the TS for the treatment of hepatitis C (HCV) in an international cohort of patients treated with direct-acting antivirals between 2015 and 2020. The primary outcome was the number of patients receiving one of the two preferred treatment options of the HCV TS, based on the highest level of evidence, cure rate, absence of ribavirin-associated adverse effects, and treatment duration. Results: We enrolled 567 patients. The number of patients treated with one of the two preferred treatment options according to the HCV TS ranged between 27% (2015) and 60% (2020; p < 0.001). Most of the patients received a regimen with a longer treatment-duration (up to 34%) and/or addition of ribavirin (up to 14%). The effect on the expected cure-rate was minimal (1–6% higher) when the first preferred TherapySelector option was given compared to the actual treatment.Conclusions: Medical decision-making can be optimised by a guideline add-on; in HCV its use appears to minimise adverse effects and cost. The use of such an add-on might have a greater impact in diseases with suboptimal cure-rates, high costs or adverse effects, for which treatment options rely on specific patient characteristics.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
Brakenhoff , S M , Theijse , T , van Wijngaarden , P , Trautwein , C , Brozat , J F , Tacke , F , Honkoop , P , Vanwolleghem , T , Posthouwer , D , Zeuzem , S , Mihm , U , Wedemeyer , H , Berg , T , Schalm , S W & de Knegt , R J 2024 , ' Patient profiled data for treatment decision-making : valuable as an add-on to hepatitis C clinical guidelines? ' , BMC Medical Informatics and Decision Making , vol. 24 , no. 1 , 227 .
Notes :
application/pdf, English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1456741448
Document Type :
Electronic Resource