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T97. REAL WORLD IMPLEMENTATION OF A TRANSDIAGNOSTIC RISK CALCULATOR FOR THE AUTOMATIC DETECTION OF INDIVIDUALS AT RISK OF PSYCHOSIS IN CLINICAL ROUTINE
BACKGROUND: Detection of individuals at-risk for psychosis is the rate-limiting step of primary indicated prevention. Improvement is imperative to improving clinical outcomes; to mitigate this, our group has developed a transdiagnostic, clinically-based, individualised risk calculator. The risk calc...
Autores principales: | , , , , , , |
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Formato: | Online Artículo Texto |
Lenguaje: | English |
Publicado: |
Oxford University Press
2020
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Materias: | |
Acceso en línea: | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7234662/ http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/schbul/sbaa029.657 |
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author | Oliver, Dominic Spada, Giulia Patel, Rashmi Stewart, Robert Dobson, Richard McGuire, Philip Fusar-Poli, Paolo |
author_facet | Oliver, Dominic Spada, Giulia Patel, Rashmi Stewart, Robert Dobson, Richard McGuire, Philip Fusar-Poli, Paolo |
author_sort | Oliver, Dominic |
collection | PubMed |
description | BACKGROUND: Detection of individuals at-risk for psychosis is the rate-limiting step of primary indicated prevention. Improvement is imperative to improving clinical outcomes; to mitigate this, our group has developed a transdiagnostic, clinically-based, individualised risk calculator. The risk calculator uses simple predictors (age, gender, ethnicity, ICD-10 diagnosis and age*gender interaction) selected a priori and recorded as part of clinical routine. While there are numerous examples of prognostic tools in psychiatry that have been externally validated, there are none that have been implemented into clinical practice. This is the first study assessing the implementation of a prognostic tool in psychiatry. METHODS: A feasibility study was composed of both an initial in-vitro phase, aiming to successfully integrate the risk calculator into the local electronic case register, as well as an in-vivo phase to investigate the feasibility of real world implementation of the calculator in clinical routine. The in-vitro phase involved development of the risk calculator prototype, addressing of feasibility problems associated with its implementation in clinical practice, and conducting clinician engagement work prior to initiating in-vivo piloting. In the in-vivo phase, the risk calculator was implemented into the local electronic health records. Clinicians were not required to enter any new variables as predictors were recorded as part of clinical routine. All patients over the age of 14 receiving a non-organic, non-psychotic primary index diagnosis were automatically assessed for psychosis risk, with responsible clinicians being contacted if their patient was considered to be above 5% risk within 2 years. The primary outcome was adherence of clinicians to the use of the transdiagnostic risk calculator, as measured by the proportion of clinicians who responded to prompts sent on the recommendation of the calculator. RESULTS: Of the 88 patients included in the final sample, mean (SD) age was 39.05 (18.27) and 33 (37.5%) were male. The calculator was successfully integrated into the local electronic case register, running automatically to estimate psychosis risk on all new cases in our mental health trust. Clinician adherence was high (84%), providing evidence of successful implementation of the risk calculator in clinical routine. 55% of clinicians who responded also referred their patient for a refined psychosis risk assessment, highlighting the applicability of the calculator. DISCUSSION: This implementation study provides the rationale for a prospective effectiveness study for our transdiagnostic, clinically-based, individualised risk calculator. This risk calculator has the potential to significantly improve the identification of individuals at-risk for psychosis and has been shown to be feasible to use in clinical routine. Additionally, this highlights the absence of implementation research in psychiatry, in spite of the prolific publishing of prognostically accurate models. |
format | Online Article Text |
id | pubmed-7234662 |
institution | National Center for Biotechnology Information |
language | English |
publishDate | 2020 |
publisher | Oxford University Press |
record_format | MEDLINE/PubMed |
spelling | pubmed-72346622020-05-23 T97. REAL WORLD IMPLEMENTATION OF A TRANSDIAGNOSTIC RISK CALCULATOR FOR THE AUTOMATIC DETECTION OF INDIVIDUALS AT RISK OF PSYCHOSIS IN CLINICAL ROUTINE Oliver, Dominic Spada, Giulia Patel, Rashmi Stewart, Robert Dobson, Richard McGuire, Philip Fusar-Poli, Paolo Schizophr Bull Poster Session III BACKGROUND: Detection of individuals at-risk for psychosis is the rate-limiting step of primary indicated prevention. Improvement is imperative to improving clinical outcomes; to mitigate this, our group has developed a transdiagnostic, clinically-based, individualised risk calculator. The risk calculator uses simple predictors (age, gender, ethnicity, ICD-10 diagnosis and age*gender interaction) selected a priori and recorded as part of clinical routine. While there are numerous examples of prognostic tools in psychiatry that have been externally validated, there are none that have been implemented into clinical practice. This is the first study assessing the implementation of a prognostic tool in psychiatry. METHODS: A feasibility study was composed of both an initial in-vitro phase, aiming to successfully integrate the risk calculator into the local electronic case register, as well as an in-vivo phase to investigate the feasibility of real world implementation of the calculator in clinical routine. The in-vitro phase involved development of the risk calculator prototype, addressing of feasibility problems associated with its implementation in clinical practice, and conducting clinician engagement work prior to initiating in-vivo piloting. In the in-vivo phase, the risk calculator was implemented into the local electronic health records. Clinicians were not required to enter any new variables as predictors were recorded as part of clinical routine. All patients over the age of 14 receiving a non-organic, non-psychotic primary index diagnosis were automatically assessed for psychosis risk, with responsible clinicians being contacted if their patient was considered to be above 5% risk within 2 years. The primary outcome was adherence of clinicians to the use of the transdiagnostic risk calculator, as measured by the proportion of clinicians who responded to prompts sent on the recommendation of the calculator. RESULTS: Of the 88 patients included in the final sample, mean (SD) age was 39.05 (18.27) and 33 (37.5%) were male. The calculator was successfully integrated into the local electronic case register, running automatically to estimate psychosis risk on all new cases in our mental health trust. Clinician adherence was high (84%), providing evidence of successful implementation of the risk calculator in clinical routine. 55% of clinicians who responded also referred their patient for a refined psychosis risk assessment, highlighting the applicability of the calculator. DISCUSSION: This implementation study provides the rationale for a prospective effectiveness study for our transdiagnostic, clinically-based, individualised risk calculator. This risk calculator has the potential to significantly improve the identification of individuals at-risk for psychosis and has been shown to be feasible to use in clinical routine. Additionally, this highlights the absence of implementation research in psychiatry, in spite of the prolific publishing of prognostically accurate models. Oxford University Press 2020-05 2020-05-18 /pmc/articles/PMC7234662/ http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/schbul/sbaa029.657 Text en © The Author(s) 2020. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Maryland Psychiatric Research Center. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/ This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/), which permits non-commercial re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited. For commercial re-use, please contact journals.permissions@oup.com |
spellingShingle | Poster Session III Oliver, Dominic Spada, Giulia Patel, Rashmi Stewart, Robert Dobson, Richard McGuire, Philip Fusar-Poli, Paolo T97. REAL WORLD IMPLEMENTATION OF A TRANSDIAGNOSTIC RISK CALCULATOR FOR THE AUTOMATIC DETECTION OF INDIVIDUALS AT RISK OF PSYCHOSIS IN CLINICAL ROUTINE |
title | T97. REAL WORLD IMPLEMENTATION OF A TRANSDIAGNOSTIC RISK CALCULATOR FOR THE AUTOMATIC DETECTION OF INDIVIDUALS AT RISK OF PSYCHOSIS IN CLINICAL ROUTINE |
title_full | T97. REAL WORLD IMPLEMENTATION OF A TRANSDIAGNOSTIC RISK CALCULATOR FOR THE AUTOMATIC DETECTION OF INDIVIDUALS AT RISK OF PSYCHOSIS IN CLINICAL ROUTINE |
title_fullStr | T97. REAL WORLD IMPLEMENTATION OF A TRANSDIAGNOSTIC RISK CALCULATOR FOR THE AUTOMATIC DETECTION OF INDIVIDUALS AT RISK OF PSYCHOSIS IN CLINICAL ROUTINE |
title_full_unstemmed | T97. REAL WORLD IMPLEMENTATION OF A TRANSDIAGNOSTIC RISK CALCULATOR FOR THE AUTOMATIC DETECTION OF INDIVIDUALS AT RISK OF PSYCHOSIS IN CLINICAL ROUTINE |
title_short | T97. REAL WORLD IMPLEMENTATION OF A TRANSDIAGNOSTIC RISK CALCULATOR FOR THE AUTOMATIC DETECTION OF INDIVIDUALS AT RISK OF PSYCHOSIS IN CLINICAL ROUTINE |
title_sort | t97. real world implementation of a transdiagnostic risk calculator for the automatic detection of individuals at risk of psychosis in clinical routine |
topic | Poster Session III |
url | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7234662/ http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/schbul/sbaa029.657 |
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