Treatment of respiratory impairment in patients with motor neuron disease in the N etherlands: patient preference and timing of referral
Background and purpose We assessed the first evaluation at a large ventilation clinic in the Netherlands to: (i) determine what proportion of patients with motor neuron disease would benefit from earlier referral; and (ii) examine the patient preferences regarding ventilatory support. Methods Observ...
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Published in | European journal of neurology Vol. 20; no. 12; pp. 1524 - 1530 |
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Main Authors | , , , , , , , , |
Format | Journal Article |
Language | English |
Published |
01.12.2013
|
Online Access | Get full text |
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Summary: | Background and purpose
We assessed the first evaluation at a large ventilation clinic in the Netherlands to: (i) determine what proportion of patients with motor neuron disease would benefit from earlier referral; and (ii) examine the patient preferences regarding ventilatory support.
Methods
Observational study at a single centre with a catchment area of 7.6 million inhabitants. Data on disease status, the referral process and patients' preferences regarding ventilatory support were collected during the first home ventilation services (
HVS
) assessment and analysed for correlation with the presence of daytime hypercapnia and suspected nocturnal hypoventilation. The latter conditions require immediate (within 48 h) or subacute (within 3 weeks) initiation of ventilatory support.
Results
Vital capacity (in percentage of predicted value,
VC
%pred) was assessed by referring physicians in 84% of the 217 referred patients; the mean
VC
%pred was 69% (
SD
16). One‐hundred and ninety‐one patients attended the first
HVS
assessment without ventilatory support, at a median of 21 days following referral: 18% had respiratory failure (daytime hypercapnia), 19% had normocapnia but were suspected of nocturnal hypoventilation, and 63% had normocapnia without symptoms. Following the
HVS
assessment, 25 patients (13%) declined home mechanical ventilation; this occurred more often in patients with (14/70) compared with patients without respiratory impairment (11/121;
P
< 0.05).
Conclusion
A meaningful proportion of patients who desire ventilatory support are referred to a ventilation clinic after already developing respiratory failure. Future studies could examine means, including more sensitive respiratory measures, to detect those patients who could benefit from earlier referral.
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ISSN: | 1351-5101 1468-1331 |
DOI: | 10.1111/ene.12096 |