Better guidelines for better care: accounting for multimorbidity in clinical guidelines – structured examination of exemplar guidelines and health economic modelling

Background: Multimorbidity is common but most clinical guidelines focus on single diseases. Aim: To test the feasibility of new approaches to developing single-disease guidelines to better account for multimorbidity. Design: Literature-based and economic modelling project focused on areas where mult...

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Veröffentlicht in:Health services and delivery research 2017-04, Vol.5 (16), p.1-150
Hauptverfasser: Guthrie, Bruce, Thompson, Alexander, Dumbreck, Siobhan, Flynn, Angela, Alderson, Phil, Nairn, Moray, Treweek, Shaun, Payne, Katherine
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Background: Multimorbidity is common but most clinical guidelines focus on single diseases. Aim: To test the feasibility of new approaches to developing single-disease guidelines to better account for multimorbidity. Design: Literature-based and economic modelling project focused on areas where multimorbidity makes guideline application problematic. Methods: (1) Examination of accounting for multimorbidity in three exemplar National Institute for Health and Care Excellence guidelines (type 2 diabetes, depression, heart failure); (2) examination of the applicability of evidence in multimorbidity for the exemplar conditions; (3) exploration of methods for comparing absolute benefit of treatment; (4) incorporation of treatment pay-off time and competing risk of death in an exemplar economic model for long-term preventative treatments with slowly accruing benefit; and (5) development of a discrete event simulation model-based cost-effectiveness analysis for people with both depression and coronary heart disease. Results: (1) Comorbidity was rarely accounted for in the clinical research questions that framed the development of the exemplar guidelines, and was rarely accounted for in treatment recommendations. Drug–disease interactions were common only for comorbid chronic kidney disease, but potentially serious drug–drug interactions between recommended drugs were common and rarely accounted for in guidelines. (2) For all three conditions, the trials underpinning treatment recommendations largely excluded older, more comorbid and more coprescribed patients. The implications of low applicability varied by condition, with type 2 diabetes having large differences in comorbidity, whereas potentially serious drug–drug interactions were more important for depression. (3) Comparing absolute benefit of treatments for different conditions was shown to be technically feasible, but only if guideline developers are willing to make a number of significant assumptions. (4) The lifetime absolute benefit of statins for primary prevention is highly sensitive to the presence of both the direct treatment disutility of taking a daily tablet and competing risk of death. (5) It was feasible to use a discrete event simulation-based model to represent the relevant care pathways to estimate the relative cost-effectiveness of pharmacological treatments of major depressive disorder in primary care for patients who are also likely to go on and receive treatment for coronary heart disease
ISSN:2050-4349
2050-4357
DOI:10.3310/hsdr05160