Clinical and cost-effectiveness of pessary self-management versus clinic-based care for pelvic organ prolapse in women: the TOPSY RCT with process evaluation.

IF 3.5 2区 医学 Q1 HEALTH CARE SCIENCES & SERVICES Health technology assessment Pub Date : 2024-05-01 DOI:10.3310/NWTB5403
Carol Bugge, Suzanne Hagen, Andrew Elders, Helen Mason, Kirsteen Goodman, Melanie Dembinsky, Lynn Melone, Catherine Best, Sarkis Manoukian, Lucy Dwyer, Aethele Khunda, Margaret Graham, Wael Agur, Suzanne Breeman, Jane Culverhouse, Angela Forrest, Mark Forrest, Karen Guerrero, Christine Hemming, Doreen McClurg, John Norrie, Ranee Thakar, Rohna Kearney
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In the UK, most women with pelvic organ prolapse attend clinics for pessary care.</p><p><strong>Objectives: </strong>To determine the clinical effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of vaginal pessary self-management on prolapse-specific quality of life for women with prolapse compared with clinic-based care; and to assess intervention acceptability and contextual influences on effectiveness, adherence and fidelity.</p><p><strong>Design: </strong>A multicentre, parallel-group, superiority randomised controlled trial with a mixed-methods process evaluation.</p><p><strong>Participants: </strong>Women attending UK NHS outpatient pessary services, aged ≥ 18 years, using a pessary of any type/material (except shelf, Gellhorn or Cube) for at least 2 weeks. 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Analysis was by intention to treat.</p><p><strong>Results: </strong>Three hundred and forty women were randomised (self-management, <i>n</i> = 169; clinic-based care, <i>n</i> = 171). At 18 months post randomisation, 291 questionnaires with valid primary outcome data were available (self-management, <i>n</i> = 139; clinic-based care, <i>n</i> = 152). Baseline economic analysis was based on 264 participants (self-management, <i>n</i> = 125; clinic-based care, <i>n</i> = 139) with valid quality of life and resource use data. Self-management was an acceptable intervention. There was no group difference in prolapse-specific quality of life at 18 months (adjusted mean difference -0.03, 95% confidence interval -9.32 to 9.25). There was fidelity to intervention delivery. Self-management was cost-effective at a willingness-to-pay threshold of £20,000 per quality-adjusted life-year gained, with an estimated incremental net benefit of £564.32 and an 80.81% probability of cost-effectiveness. 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Abstract

Background: Pelvic organ prolapse is common, causes unpleasant symptoms and negatively affects women's quality of life. In the UK, most women with pelvic organ prolapse attend clinics for pessary care.

Objectives: To determine the clinical effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of vaginal pessary self-management on prolapse-specific quality of life for women with prolapse compared with clinic-based care; and to assess intervention acceptability and contextual influences on effectiveness, adherence and fidelity.

Design: A multicentre, parallel-group, superiority randomised controlled trial with a mixed-methods process evaluation.

Participants: Women attending UK NHS outpatient pessary services, aged ≥ 18 years, using a pessary of any type/material (except shelf, Gellhorn or Cube) for at least 2 weeks. Exclusions: women with limited manual dexterity, with cognitive deficit (prohibiting consent or self-management), pregnant or non-English-speaking.

Intervention: The self-management intervention involved a 30-minute teaching appointment, an information leaflet, a 2-week follow-up telephone call and a local clinic telephone helpline number. Clinic-based care involved routine appointments determined by centres' usual practice.

Allocation: Remote web-based application; minimisation was by age, pessary user type and centre.

Blinding: Participants, those delivering the intervention and researchers were not blinded to group allocation.

Outcomes: The patient-reported primary outcome (measured using the Pelvic Floor Impact Questionnaire-7) was prolapse-specific quality of life, and the cost-effectiveness outcome was incremental cost per quality-adjusted life-year (a specifically developed health Resource Use Questionnaire was used) at 18 months post randomisation. Secondary outcome measures included self-efficacy and complications. Process evaluation data were collected by interview, audio-recording and checklist. Analysis was by intention to treat.

Results: Three hundred and forty women were randomised (self-management, n = 169; clinic-based care, n = 171). At 18 months post randomisation, 291 questionnaires with valid primary outcome data were available (self-management, n = 139; clinic-based care, n = 152). Baseline economic analysis was based on 264 participants (self-management, n = 125; clinic-based care, n = 139) with valid quality of life and resource use data. Self-management was an acceptable intervention. There was no group difference in prolapse-specific quality of life at 18 months (adjusted mean difference -0.03, 95% confidence interval -9.32 to 9.25). There was fidelity to intervention delivery. Self-management was cost-effective at a willingness-to-pay threshold of £20,000 per quality-adjusted life-year gained, with an estimated incremental net benefit of £564.32 and an 80.81% probability of cost-effectiveness. At 18 months, more pessary complications were reported in the clinic-based care group (adjusted mean difference 3.83, 95% confidence interval 0.81 to 6.86). There was no group difference in general self-efficacy, but self-managing women were more confident in pessary self-management activities. In both groups, contextual factors impacted on adherence and effectiveness. There were no reported serious unexpected serious adverse reactions. There were 32 serious adverse events (self-management, n = 17; clinic-based care, n = 14), all unrelated to the intervention. Skew in the baseline data for the Pelvic Floor Impact Questionnaire-7, the influence of the global COVID-19 pandemic, the potential effects of crossover and the lack of ethnic diversity in the recruited sample were possible limitations.

Conclusions: Self-management was acceptable and cost-effective, led to fewer complications and did not improve or worsen quality of life for women with prolapse compared with clinic-based care. Future research is needed to develop a quality-of-life measure that is sensitive to the changes women desire from treatment.

Study registration: This study is registered as ISRCTN62510577.

Funding: This award was funded by the National Institute for Health and Care Research (NIHR) Health Technology Assessment programme (NIHR award ref: 16/82/01) and is published in full in Health Technology Assessment; Vol. 28, No. 23. See the NIHR Funding and Awards website for further award information.

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妇女盆腔器官脱垂的栓剂自我管理与诊所护理的临床和成本效益:TOPSY RCT 及过程评估。
背景:盆腔器官脱垂很常见,会引起不舒服的症状,并对妇女的生活质量产生负面影响。在英国,大多数患有盆腔器官脱垂的妇女都会到诊所接受栓塞治疗:目的:与诊所护理相比,确定阴道栓剂自我管理对脱垂妇女生活质量的临床有效性和成本效益;评估干预的可接受性以及对有效性、依从性和忠诚度的环境影响:设计:多中心、平行组、优越性随机对照试验,采用混合方法进行过程评估:参加英国国家医疗服务体系(NHS)门诊子宫环服务的妇女,年龄≥ 18 岁,使用任何类型/材料的子宫环(除架式、Gellhorn 或 Cube 外)至少 2 周。排除:手部灵活性受限、有认知障碍(禁止同意或自我管理)、怀孕或不讲英语的妇女:自我管理干预包括一次 30 分钟的教学预约、一份信息宣传单、一次为期 2 周的电话随访和一个当地诊所的求助热线号码。诊所护理包括根据中心的常规做法确定的常规预约:分配:远程网络应用;按年龄、避孕药使用者类型和中心进行最小化分配:结果:患者报告的主要结果(使用盆底影响问卷-7测量)是脱垂特异性生活质量,成本效益结果是随机化后18个月时每质量调整生命年的增量成本(使用专门开发的卫生资源使用问卷)。次要结果测量包括自我效能和并发症。过程评估数据通过访谈、录音和核对表收集。结果:340名妇女接受了随机治疗(自我管理,169人;诊所治疗,171人)。随机分配后 18 个月,291 份问卷的主要结果数据有效(自我管理,139 人;诊所护理,152 人)。基线经济分析基于 264 名参与者(自我管理,n = 125;诊所护理,n = 139)的有效生活质量和资源使用数据。自我管理是一种可接受的干预措施。18个月后,脱垂患者的生活质量没有组间差异(调整后的平均差异为-0.03,95%置信区间为-9.32至9.25)。干预效果良好。在每个质量调整生命年收益为20,000英镑的支付意愿阈值下,自我管理具有成本效益,估计增量净收益为564.32英镑,成本效益概率为80.81%。在18个月时,诊所护理组报告的子宫环并发症较多(调整后平均差异为3.83,95%置信区间为0.81至6.86)。总体自我效能感没有组间差异,但自我管理的妇女对子宫环自我管理活动更有信心。在两组中,环境因素都对坚持治疗和疗效产生了影响。无严重意外不良反应报告。有32例严重不良事件(自我管理组,17例;诊所护理组,14例),均与干预无关。盆底影响问卷-7的基线数据偏差、全球COVID-19大流行的影响、交叉的潜在影响以及招募样本中缺乏种族多样性都是可能存在的局限性:结论:与诊所治疗相比,自我管理是可以接受的,而且具有成本效益,导致的并发症较少,对患有脱垂的妇女来说,生活质量既没有改善也没有恶化。未来的研究需要开发出一种生活质量测量方法,该方法应能敏感地反映出妇女希望从治疗中获得的改变:本研究已注册为 ISRCTN62510577:该奖项由美国国家健康与护理研究所(NIHR)健康技术评估项目资助(NIHR奖项编号:16/82/01),全文发表于《健康技术评估》(Health Technology Assessment)第28卷第23期。如需了解更多奖项信息,请访问 NIHR Funding and Awards 网站。
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来源期刊
Health technology assessment
Health technology assessment 医学-卫生保健
CiteScore
6.90
自引率
0.00%
发文量
94
审稿时长
>12 weeks
期刊介绍: Health Technology Assessment (HTA) publishes research information on the effectiveness, costs and broader impact of health technologies for those who use, manage and provide care in the NHS.
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