Jr. Curtis et al., PATIENT-ASSESSED HEALTH OUTCOMES IN CHRONIC LUNG-DISEASE - WHAT ARE THEY, HOW DO THEY HELP US, AND WHERE DO WE GO FROM HERE, American journal of respiratory and critical care medicine, 156(4), 1997, pp. 1032-1039
Citations number
58
Categorie Soggetti
Emergency Medicine & Critical Care","Respiratory System
During the last 10 to 15 yr there has been an exponential increase in
the development and use of instruments to measure the outcomes of heal
th care from the patient's perspective. These instruments have appeare
d in the pulmonary literature, first in the assessment of COPD (1, 2)
and more recently with asthma (3-6), cystic fibrosis (7, 8), and prima
ry pulmonary hypertension (9). In March of 1996, the American Thoracic
Society sponsored a meeting to summarize the state of the art in meas
uring patient-assessed health outcomes for patients with chronic obstr
uctive lung diseases. The conference was followed by a round table dis
cussion attended by major ''stake-holders'' in the assessment of patie
nt-assessed outcomes in chronic lung disease, including academic inves
tigators who have developed and used the instruments, representatives
of the pharmaceutical industry interested in health outcomes in pharma
ceutical research, representatives of managed care interested in healt
h outcomes of the populations for whom they provide cafe, and represen
tatives of a federal regulatory agency confronted with health outcomes
in requests far the approval of pharmaceutical products. The purpose
of this report is to review, from the perspective of the authors, some
of the major points raised during the conference and the accompanying
workshop. We will summarize what outcome measures are and some of the
major instruments that have been used to assess outcomes of chronic l
ung disease. We will emphasize how patient-assessed clinical outcomes
differ from traditional outcomes and the information they provide abou
t care of patients with chronic airflow obstruction. Finally, we will
summarize the current unresolved issues in this field and important fu
ture directions.