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BreathEase: rationale, design and recruitment of a randomised trial and embedded mixed-methods study of a multiprofessional breathlessness service in early palliative care

BACKGROUND: The Munich Breathlessness Service has adapted novel support services to the German context, to reduce burden in patients and carers from breathlessness in advanced disease. It has been evaluated in a pragmatic fast-track randomised controlled trial (BreathEase; NCT02622412) with embedded...

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Autores principales: Schunk, Michaela, Berger, Ursula, Le, Lien, Rehfuess, Eva, Schwarzkopf, Larissa, Streitwieser, Sabine, Müller, Thomas, Hofmann, Miriam, Holle, Rolf, Huber, Rudolf Maria, Mansmann, Ulrich, Bausewein, Claudia
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: European Respiratory Society 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8521025/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34671668
http://dx.doi.org/10.1183/23120541.00228-2020
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author Schunk, Michaela
Berger, Ursula
Le, Lien
Rehfuess, Eva
Schwarzkopf, Larissa
Streitwieser, Sabine
Müller, Thomas
Hofmann, Miriam
Holle, Rolf
Huber, Rudolf Maria
Mansmann, Ulrich
Bausewein, Claudia
author_facet Schunk, Michaela
Berger, Ursula
Le, Lien
Rehfuess, Eva
Schwarzkopf, Larissa
Streitwieser, Sabine
Müller, Thomas
Hofmann, Miriam
Holle, Rolf
Huber, Rudolf Maria
Mansmann, Ulrich
Bausewein, Claudia
author_sort Schunk, Michaela
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: The Munich Breathlessness Service has adapted novel support services to the German context, to reduce burden in patients and carers from breathlessness in advanced disease. It has been evaluated in a pragmatic fast-track randomised controlled trial (BreathEase; NCT02622412) with embedded qualitative interviews and postal survey. The aim of this article is to describe the intervention model and study design, analyse recruitment to the trial and compare sample characteristics with other studies in the field. METHODS: Analysis of recruitment pathways and enrolment, sociodemographic and clinical characteristics of participants and carers. RESULTS: Out of 439 people screened, 253 (58%) were offered enrolment and 183 (42%) participated. n=97 (70%) carers participated. 186 (42%) people did not qualify for inclusion, mostly because breathlessness could not be attributed to an underlying disease. All participants were self-referring; 60% through media sources. Eligibility and willingness to participate were associated to social networks and illness-related activities as recruitment routes. Mean age of participants was 71 years (51% women), with COPD (63%), chronic heart failure (8%), interstitial lung disease (9%), pulmonary hypertension (6%) and cancer (7%) as underlying conditions. Postal survey response rate was 89%. Qualitative interviews were conducted with 16 patients and nine carers. CONCLUSION: The BreathEase study has a larger and more heterogeneous sample compared to other trials. The self-referral-based and prolonged recruitment drawing on media sources approximates real-world conditions of early palliative care. Integrating qualitative and quantitative components will allow a better understanding and interpretation of the results of the main effectiveness study.
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spelling pubmed-85210252021-10-19 BreathEase: rationale, design and recruitment of a randomised trial and embedded mixed-methods study of a multiprofessional breathlessness service in early palliative care Schunk, Michaela Berger, Ursula Le, Lien Rehfuess, Eva Schwarzkopf, Larissa Streitwieser, Sabine Müller, Thomas Hofmann, Miriam Holle, Rolf Huber, Rudolf Maria Mansmann, Ulrich Bausewein, Claudia ERJ Open Res Original Research Articles BACKGROUND: The Munich Breathlessness Service has adapted novel support services to the German context, to reduce burden in patients and carers from breathlessness in advanced disease. It has been evaluated in a pragmatic fast-track randomised controlled trial (BreathEase; NCT02622412) with embedded qualitative interviews and postal survey. The aim of this article is to describe the intervention model and study design, analyse recruitment to the trial and compare sample characteristics with other studies in the field. METHODS: Analysis of recruitment pathways and enrolment, sociodemographic and clinical characteristics of participants and carers. RESULTS: Out of 439 people screened, 253 (58%) were offered enrolment and 183 (42%) participated. n=97 (70%) carers participated. 186 (42%) people did not qualify for inclusion, mostly because breathlessness could not be attributed to an underlying disease. All participants were self-referring; 60% through media sources. Eligibility and willingness to participate were associated to social networks and illness-related activities as recruitment routes. Mean age of participants was 71 years (51% women), with COPD (63%), chronic heart failure (8%), interstitial lung disease (9%), pulmonary hypertension (6%) and cancer (7%) as underlying conditions. Postal survey response rate was 89%. Qualitative interviews were conducted with 16 patients and nine carers. CONCLUSION: The BreathEase study has a larger and more heterogeneous sample compared to other trials. The self-referral-based and prolonged recruitment drawing on media sources approximates real-world conditions of early palliative care. Integrating qualitative and quantitative components will allow a better understanding and interpretation of the results of the main effectiveness study. European Respiratory Society 2021-10-18 /pmc/articles/PMC8521025/ /pubmed/34671668 http://dx.doi.org/10.1183/23120541.00228-2020 Text en Copyright ©The authors 2021 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/This version is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial Licence 4.0. For commercial reproduction rights and permissions contact permissions@ersnet.org (mailto:permissions@ersnet.org)
spellingShingle Original Research Articles
Schunk, Michaela
Berger, Ursula
Le, Lien
Rehfuess, Eva
Schwarzkopf, Larissa
Streitwieser, Sabine
Müller, Thomas
Hofmann, Miriam
Holle, Rolf
Huber, Rudolf Maria
Mansmann, Ulrich
Bausewein, Claudia
BreathEase: rationale, design and recruitment of a randomised trial and embedded mixed-methods study of a multiprofessional breathlessness service in early palliative care
title BreathEase: rationale, design and recruitment of a randomised trial and embedded mixed-methods study of a multiprofessional breathlessness service in early palliative care
title_full BreathEase: rationale, design and recruitment of a randomised trial and embedded mixed-methods study of a multiprofessional breathlessness service in early palliative care
title_fullStr BreathEase: rationale, design and recruitment of a randomised trial and embedded mixed-methods study of a multiprofessional breathlessness service in early palliative care
title_full_unstemmed BreathEase: rationale, design and recruitment of a randomised trial and embedded mixed-methods study of a multiprofessional breathlessness service in early palliative care
title_short BreathEase: rationale, design and recruitment of a randomised trial and embedded mixed-methods study of a multiprofessional breathlessness service in early palliative care
title_sort breathease: rationale, design and recruitment of a randomised trial and embedded mixed-methods study of a multiprofessional breathlessness service in early palliative care
topic Original Research Articles
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8521025/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34671668
http://dx.doi.org/10.1183/23120541.00228-2020
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