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1.
ERJ Open Res ; 10(3)2024 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38887677

ABSTRACT

Rationale: Poor asthma control in pregnancy is associated with adverse perinatal outcomes. Treatable traits improve patient outcomes but the pattern and prevalence of treatable traits in pregnant women with asthma is unknown. Whether treatable traits in pregnant women with asthma can be identified via a virtual care consult is also unknown. The objective of the present study was to assess the prevalence of treatable traits in pregnant women with asthma using a virtual model of care. Methods: Pregnant women with asthma (n=196) underwent an assessment by an asthma nurse educator and a respiratory physician via telehealth. In this clinical audit, 16 treatable traits were assessed including two traits in the pulmonary domain, five traits in the behavioural/risk factors domain and nine traits in the extrapulmonary domain. Results: Pregnant women with asthma had a mean±sd of 7.5±2.0 treatable traits per person including 1.0±0.7 treatable traits per person in the pulmonary domain, 3.5±1.56 in the extrapulmonary domain and 2±0.9 in the risk factor/behavioural domain. Treatable traits in the behavioural/risk factor domain were most prevalent and these included limited asthma knowledge (96%), inadequate inhaler technique (84%) and no written asthma action plan (80%). On average 3.8±1.24 interventions per person were delivered for a mean±sd of 7.5±2.0 treatable traits per person. Conclusion: Virtual antenatal asthma care is a feasible approach for assessing treatable traits in pregnant women with mild asthma. Pregnant women with asthma exhibit multiple management issues. Virtual models of care might increase asthma in pregnancy service uptake and acceptability.

2.
Breathe (Sheff) ; 17(4): 210118, 2021 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35035572

ABSTRACT

COPD is complex and heterogeneous with respect to its aetiology, clinical presentation, phenotypes and biological mechanisms. Despite this, COPD is still diagnosed and treated according to simple clinical measures, including airflow limitation, symptoms and exacerbation frequency, leading to failure to recognise the disease's heterogeneity and/or to provide targeted interventions. COPD continues to have a very large burden of disease with suboptimal outcomes for people with the disease, including frequent hospitalisation with exacerbations, rapid lung function decline, multimorbidity and death from respiratory failure. In light of this, there have been increasing calls for a renewed taxonomy with better characterisation of COPD phenotypes and endotypes. This would allow the unravelling of COPD's complexity and heterogeneity, the implementation of targeted interventions and improved patient outcomes. The treatable traits strategy is a proposed vehicle for the implementation of precision medicine in chronic airway diseases. In this review, in addition to summarising the key knowledge on the heterogeneity of COPD, we refer to the existing evidence pertaining to the treatable traits strategy as applied in COPD and discuss implementation in different settings.

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