An international survey of current management practices for polymyalgia rheumatica by general practitioners and rheumatologists.
Author
Donskov AOMackie SL
Hauge EM
Toro-Guti�rrez CE
Hansen IT
Hemmig AK
Van der Maas A
Gheita T
Nielsen BD
Douglas KMJ
Conway R
Rezus E
Dasgupta B
Monti S
Matteson EL
Sattui SE
Matza M
Ocampo V
Gromova M
Grainger R
Bran A
Appenzeller S
Goecke A
Colman N
Keen HI
Kuwana M
Gupta L
Salim B
Harifi G
Erraoui M
Ziade N
Al-Ani NA
Ajibade A
Knitza J
Fr�lund L
Yates M
Pimentel-Quiroz VR
Lyrio AM
Sandovici M
Van der Geest KSM
Helliwell T
Brouwer E
Dejaco C
Keller KK
Affiliation
Aarhus University Hospital; Aarhus, Denmark; University of Leeds; Leeds Teaching Hospitals NHS Trust; The Dudley Group NHS Foundation Trust et alPublication date
01/08/2023Subject
Rheumatology
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
To explore current management practices for PMR by general practitioners (GPs) and rheumatologists including implications for clinical trial recruitment. An English language questionnaire was constructed by a working group of rheumatologists and GPs from six countries. The questionnaire focused on: 1: Respondent characteristics 2: Referral practices 3: Treatment with glucocorticoids 4: Diagnostics 5: Comorbidities and 6: Barriers to research. The questionnaire was distributed to rheumatologists and GPs worldwide via members of the International PMR/Giant Cell Arteritis Study Group. In total, 394 GPs and 937 rheumatologists responded to the survey. GPs referred a median of 25% of their suspected PMR patients for diagnosis and 50% of these were returned to their GP for management. In general, 39% of rheumatologists evaluated patients with suspected PMR >2 weeks after referral, and a median of 50% of patients had started prednisolone before rheumatologist evaluation. Direct comparison of initial treatment showed that the percentage prescribing >25 mg prednisolone daily for patients was 30% for GPs and 12% for rheumatologists. Diagnostic imaging was rarely used. More than half (56%) of rheumatologists experienced difficulties recruiting people with PMR to clinical trials. Conclusion: This large international survey indicates that a large proportion of people with PMR are not referred for diagnosis, and that the proportion of treatment-naive patients declined with increasing time from referral to assessment. Strategies are needed to change referral and management of people with PMR, to improve clinical practice and facilitate recruitment to clinical trials. The Author(s) 2023. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the British Society for Rheumatology. All rights reserved. For permissions, please email: journals.permissions@oup.com.Citation
Donskov AO, Mackie SL, Hauge EM, Toro-Guti�rrez CE, Hansen IT, Hemmig AK, Van der Maas A, Gheita T, Nielsen BD, Douglas KMJ, Conway R, Rezus E, Dasgupta B, Monti S, Matteson EL, Sattui SE, Matza M, Ocampo V, Gromova M, Grainger R, Bran A, Appenzeller S, Goecke A, Colman N, Keen HI, Kuwana M, Gupta L, Salim B, Harifi G, Erraoui M, Ziade N, Al-Ani NA, Ajibade A, Knitza J, Fr�lund L, Yates M, Pimentel-Quiroz VR, Lyrio AM, Sandovici M, Van der Geest KSM, Helliwell T, Brouwer E, Dejaco C, Keller KK. An international survey of current management practices for polymyalgia rheumatica by general practitioners and rheumatologists. Rheumatology (Oxford). 2023 Aug 1;62(8):2797-2805. doi: 10.1093/rheumatology/keac713. PMID: 36637182.Type
ArticlePMID
36637182Journal
RheumatologyPublisher
Oxford University Pressae974a485f413a2113503eed53cd6c53
10.1093/rheumatology/keac713