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Anti-IgE therapy for asthma: an audit at a tertiary care centre in Saudi Arabia

BACKGROUND: Although anti-IgE therapy has been shown to offer numerous benefits, we suspect it is underutilized locally. To date, there are no studies on any aspect of its use in the Arab region. There is also no information on whether physicians follow current guidelines nor on patient response to...

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Autores principales: Weheba, Ihab Mokhtar, Abdelsayed, Abeer Mohamed, Arnaout, Rand Khaled, Zeitouni, Mohamed Omar, Mobaireek, Khalid Fahad, AlHarthi, Tahani Bakheet, Mobeireek, Abdullah Fahad
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: King Faisal Specialist Hospital and Research Centre 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6302986/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30531179
http://dx.doi.org/10.5144/0256-4947.2018.439
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author Weheba, Ihab Mokhtar
Abdelsayed, Abeer Mohamed
Arnaout, Rand Khaled
Zeitouni, Mohamed Omar
Mobaireek, Khalid Fahad
AlHarthi, Tahani Bakheet
Mobeireek, Abdullah Fahad
author_facet Weheba, Ihab Mokhtar
Abdelsayed, Abeer Mohamed
Arnaout, Rand Khaled
Zeitouni, Mohamed Omar
Mobaireek, Khalid Fahad
AlHarthi, Tahani Bakheet
Mobeireek, Abdullah Fahad
author_sort Weheba, Ihab Mokhtar
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Although anti-IgE therapy has been shown to offer numerous benefits, we suspect it is underutilized locally. To date, there are no studies on any aspect of its use in the Arab region. There is also no information on whether physicians follow current guidelines nor on patient response to this form of therapy. OBJECTIVE: Assess the use of omalizumab for patients with difficult asthma at a tertiary care center. DESIGN: Retrospective, descriptive. SETTING: Tertiary care hospital. PATIENTS AND METHODS: Information was collected from medical records and interviews of all patients who received a minimum of 6 months of omalizumab, including data on practices of the prescribing physician (pulmonary versus allergy), indications, dose, subjective response, number of emergency room visits and hospitalizations, changes in asthma medications, adverse effects, and the setting for delivery of therapy. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Extent to which current guidelines for prescribing omalizumab were followed. Patient subjective and objective responses to treatment as reflected by changes in the use of medications and lung function before and after therapy. SAMPLE SIZE: 50 patients. RESULTS: Of the 50 consecutive patients, 35 were female and the mean (SD) age was 46.3 (9.2) years. Only 28 patients (56 %) met all the criteria for the prescription of omalizumab as per current guidelines; 18 (64%) by pulmonary and 10 (36%) by allergy physicians (P<.05). Pulmonary physicians performed more tests for conditions complicating or simulating asthma (P<.05). The mean (SD) duration of treatment by omalizumab of 35 (22) months was longer in patients managed by allergists (42 [24] months) than pulmonary physicians (30 [21] months) (P>.05). Both physician groups prescribed a lower initial dose than recommended (P<.05 recommended vs. prescribed). Patients reported a significant improvement in symptoms, reduction in the use of bronchodilators and oral steroids and in the use of healthcare services (from 16.28 [7.9] to 2.08 [1.78], P<.0001) mean values from sum of hospitalizations/year, ER visits/year, exacerbations/year, but not in other medications or pulmonary function tests (P>.05). CONCLUSION: Despite several benefits, notably a reduction in utilization of health services and asthma medication, anti-IgE therapy is probably underutilized locally. Pulmonary physicians are more likely to follow the guidelines than allergy physicians. This study suggests that there is room for improvement in the prescription practices, particularly in dosing and the setting for delivery. Further multicenter prospective studies are required to identify gaps in the current practices and improve asthma management. LIMITATIONS: Too few patients met inclusion criteria, lack of control group, and use of a subjective assessment for patient symptoms as opposed to validated questionnaires.
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spelling pubmed-63029862019-01-08 Anti-IgE therapy for asthma: an audit at a tertiary care centre in Saudi Arabia Weheba, Ihab Mokhtar Abdelsayed, Abeer Mohamed Arnaout, Rand Khaled Zeitouni, Mohamed Omar Mobaireek, Khalid Fahad AlHarthi, Tahani Bakheet Mobeireek, Abdullah Fahad Ann Saudi Med Original Article BACKGROUND: Although anti-IgE therapy has been shown to offer numerous benefits, we suspect it is underutilized locally. To date, there are no studies on any aspect of its use in the Arab region. There is also no information on whether physicians follow current guidelines nor on patient response to this form of therapy. OBJECTIVE: Assess the use of omalizumab for patients with difficult asthma at a tertiary care center. DESIGN: Retrospective, descriptive. SETTING: Tertiary care hospital. PATIENTS AND METHODS: Information was collected from medical records and interviews of all patients who received a minimum of 6 months of omalizumab, including data on practices of the prescribing physician (pulmonary versus allergy), indications, dose, subjective response, number of emergency room visits and hospitalizations, changes in asthma medications, adverse effects, and the setting for delivery of therapy. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Extent to which current guidelines for prescribing omalizumab were followed. Patient subjective and objective responses to treatment as reflected by changes in the use of medications and lung function before and after therapy. SAMPLE SIZE: 50 patients. RESULTS: Of the 50 consecutive patients, 35 were female and the mean (SD) age was 46.3 (9.2) years. Only 28 patients (56 %) met all the criteria for the prescription of omalizumab as per current guidelines; 18 (64%) by pulmonary and 10 (36%) by allergy physicians (P<.05). Pulmonary physicians performed more tests for conditions complicating or simulating asthma (P<.05). The mean (SD) duration of treatment by omalizumab of 35 (22) months was longer in patients managed by allergists (42 [24] months) than pulmonary physicians (30 [21] months) (P>.05). Both physician groups prescribed a lower initial dose than recommended (P<.05 recommended vs. prescribed). Patients reported a significant improvement in symptoms, reduction in the use of bronchodilators and oral steroids and in the use of healthcare services (from 16.28 [7.9] to 2.08 [1.78], P<.0001) mean values from sum of hospitalizations/year, ER visits/year, exacerbations/year, but not in other medications or pulmonary function tests (P>.05). CONCLUSION: Despite several benefits, notably a reduction in utilization of health services and asthma medication, anti-IgE therapy is probably underutilized locally. Pulmonary physicians are more likely to follow the guidelines than allergy physicians. This study suggests that there is room for improvement in the prescription practices, particularly in dosing and the setting for delivery. Further multicenter prospective studies are required to identify gaps in the current practices and improve asthma management. LIMITATIONS: Too few patients met inclusion criteria, lack of control group, and use of a subjective assessment for patient symptoms as opposed to validated questionnaires. King Faisal Specialist Hospital and Research Centre 2018 2018-12-06 /pmc/articles/PMC6302986/ /pubmed/30531179 http://dx.doi.org/10.5144/0256-4947.2018.439 Text en Copyright © 2018, Annals of Saudi Medicine This is an open access article under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License (CC BY-NC-ND). The details of which can be accessed at http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/
spellingShingle Original Article
Weheba, Ihab Mokhtar
Abdelsayed, Abeer Mohamed
Arnaout, Rand Khaled
Zeitouni, Mohamed Omar
Mobaireek, Khalid Fahad
AlHarthi, Tahani Bakheet
Mobeireek, Abdullah Fahad
Anti-IgE therapy for asthma: an audit at a tertiary care centre in Saudi Arabia
title Anti-IgE therapy for asthma: an audit at a tertiary care centre in Saudi Arabia
title_full Anti-IgE therapy for asthma: an audit at a tertiary care centre in Saudi Arabia
title_fullStr Anti-IgE therapy for asthma: an audit at a tertiary care centre in Saudi Arabia
title_full_unstemmed Anti-IgE therapy for asthma: an audit at a tertiary care centre in Saudi Arabia
title_short Anti-IgE therapy for asthma: an audit at a tertiary care centre in Saudi Arabia
title_sort anti-ige therapy for asthma: an audit at a tertiary care centre in saudi arabia
topic Original Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6302986/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30531179
http://dx.doi.org/10.5144/0256-4947.2018.439
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