transparency: should cf-care centers ”open their books” and publish treatment outcomes? pro

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Transparency: Should CF-care centers ”open their books” and publish treatment outcomes? PRO by Erik Wendel, Danish Cystic Fibrosis Association Hamburg 2010 - Cystic Fibrosis Europe Symposium

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Hamburg 2010 - Cystic Fibrosis Europe Symposium. Transparency: Should CF-care centers ”open their books” and publish treatment outcomes? PRO. by Erik Wendel, Danish Cystic Fibrosis Association. Ref. Jim Littlewood, CF Trust , UK. Why Data Collection and Publishing. A tool for doctors: - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Transparency:  Should CF-care centers ”open their books” and  publish treatment outcomes? PRO

Transparency: Should CF-care centers”open their books” and

publish treatment outcomes?

PRO

byErik Wendel, Danish Cystic Fibrosis Association

Hamburg 2010 - Cystic Fibrosis Europe Symposium

Page 2: Transparency:  Should CF-care centers ”open their books” and  publish treatment outcomes? PRO

Ref. Jim Littlewood, CF Trust , UK

Page 3: Transparency:  Should CF-care centers ”open their books” and  publish treatment outcomes? PRO

A tool for doctors:

• Obtain information to keep on record • Evaluate treatment result• Make new, or change present treatment methods/strategies• Pass information to others• Pass ways of good practice to other – avoid pitfalls• Setting treatment goals• Transparency• Stand up for what You do, and what You belive in

A tool for patients:

• Quality improvement• Access to information about other treatment strategies• Quicker access to new/other treatments

Why Data Collection and Publishing

Page 4: Transparency:  Should CF-care centers ”open their books” and  publish treatment outcomes? PRO

Ref. Michael P. Boyle, NACFC 2007

Page 5: Transparency:  Should CF-care centers ”open their books” and  publish treatment outcomes? PRO
Page 6: Transparency:  Should CF-care centers ”open their books” and  publish treatment outcomes? PRO

http://www.cff.org/CCNP/CareCenterReporting/index.cfm?CCaction=PerformanceSummary&IDCC=84

Page 7: Transparency:  Should CF-care centers ”open their books” and  publish treatment outcomes? PRO

http://www.cff.org/CCNP/CareCenterReporting/index.cfm?CCaction=PerformanceSummary&IDCC=6

Page 8: Transparency:  Should CF-care centers ”open their books” and  publish treatment outcomes? PRO
Page 9: Transparency:  Should CF-care centers ”open their books” and  publish treatment outcomes? PRO

Open data must come withopen CF Care Centertreatment standards

(What they do, how they do it )

Page 10: Transparency:  Should CF-care centers ”open their books” and  publish treatment outcomes? PRO
Page 11: Transparency:  Should CF-care centers ”open their books” and  publish treatment outcomes? PRO

• The US have opened the data door

• EU and US doctors have agreed on methods, data collection and what to publish

• Europe will have to follow with open data too

• Patient organisation can speed up this process

• We have passed the Point of No Return

Open data - Where are we

Page 12: Transparency:  Should CF-care centers ”open their books” and  publish treatment outcomes? PRO

• 450 patients

• 2 CF Care Centers

Rigshospitalet (RH - East Denmark) established 1967 300 pts (100 children, 200 adults) Registration of patient data since 1967

Skejby (SKS - West Denmark) established 1990 App. 150 pts, (80 children, 70 adults) No official registration before 2000

• Year 2001: Danish Registry (RH + SKS)

• Year 2007: Published data - Country vs. Center

Why Open Data - The Danish Story

Page 13: Transparency:  Should CF-care centers ”open their books” and  publish treatment outcomes? PRO

__________________________________________________________________________________________________

Year 2000-2006 Age ave. Age spread__________________________________________________________________________________________________

2006 (19 patients) 28,21 yrs 15 - 38 yrs2005 (9 patients) 26,44 ysr 11 - 42 yrs 2004 (4 patients) 18,50 yrs 09 - 18 yrs2003 (6 patients) 34,50 yrs 22 - 52 yrs2002 (9 patients) 24,33 yrs 11 - 35 yrs2001 (8 patients) 30,38 yrs 22 - 45 yrs2000 (9 patients) 23,44 yrs 10 - 34 yrs__________________________________________________________________________________________________

64 patientsAge at death with out transplantationAge at transplantation CFF 2007

Danish patients death/TX 2000-2006

Page 14: Transparency:  Should CF-care centers ”open their books” and  publish treatment outcomes? PRO

2006                    Sex Center Born TX † -TX Age ∆ SKS ∆ RH Notes

1 M SKS 1972 TX   34      2 M SKS 1973 TX   33      3 K SKS 1973 TX   33      4 M SKS 1978 TX   28      5 M SKS 1978 TX   28      6 K SKS 1979   † 27      7 K SKS 1981 TX   25      8 K SKS 1981 TX   25      9 K SKS 1983   † 23      

10 K SKS 1985 TX   21      11 M SKS 1985   † 21      12 K SKS 1986 TX   20      

13 K SKS 1991   † 15 25,61   13/150 = 8,67%                   

1 M RH 1968 TX   38      2 M RH 1971 TX   35      3 M RH 1972 TX   34      4 K RH 1972 TX   34      5 M RH 1974   † 32      

6 M RH 1976 TX   30   33,83 6/300 = 2%7 M RH 1987   † 19     Car accident                   

2005                    Sex Center Born TX † -TX Age ∆ SKS ∆ RH Notes

1 K SKS 1964 TX   41      2 K SKS 1973   † 32      3 K SKS 1980   † 25      4 M SKS 1983 TX   22      5 M SKS 1985 TX   20      6 K SKS 1994   † 11 25,17   6/150=4%                   

1 M RH 1963 TX   42      2 K RH 1979 TX   26      3 K RH 1986 TX   19   29,00 3/300=1%

Page 15: Transparency:  Should CF-care centers ”open their books” and  publish treatment outcomes? PRO

Investigation of more detailed data needed

Why Open Data - The Danish Story

Page 16: Transparency:  Should CF-care centers ”open their books” and  publish treatment outcomes? PRO
Page 17: Transparency:  Should CF-care centers ”open their books” and  publish treatment outcomes? PRO

Copenhagen (east) vs Skejby (vest)Z-score BMI, children born after 01.01.1990, patients del508 homozygotes

Page 18: Transparency:  Should CF-care centers ”open their books” and  publish treatment outcomes? PRO

Copenhagen (east) vs Skejby (vest)Lung function FEV1 of predicted, children born after 01.01.1990, patients del508 homozygotes

Page 19: Transparency:  Should CF-care centers ”open their books” and  publish treatment outcomes? PRO

Data are not different

Data are different

DK Reactions to 2005 Data Outcomes

Page 20: Transparency:  Should CF-care centers ”open their books” and  publish treatment outcomes? PRO

Stage 1: The data are wrong

Stage 2 The data are right, but it’s not a problem

Stage 3 The data are right; It is a problem; But it’s NOT my problem

Stage 4 I accept the burden of improvement

Typical reactions to Data Outcomes

Page 21: Transparency:  Should CF-care centers ”open their books” and  publish treatment outcomes? PRO

What data to go for?

• Overall data on FEV1 and BMI, children and adults, is a good start.

• BUT most CF patients die from chronic lung infection with Pseudomonas, Burkholderia, Achromobacter etc.

• THEREFORE data on how our CF Care Centres handle and treat these infections, and the clinical output they get, IS IMPORTANT AND URGENT FOR PATIENTS

Page 22: Transparency:  Should CF-care centers ”open their books” and  publish treatment outcomes? PRO

NACFConference 2008

Page 23: Transparency:  Should CF-care centers ”open their books” and  publish treatment outcomes? PRO

NACFConference 2008

Page 24: Transparency:  Should CF-care centers ”open their books” and  publish treatment outcomes? PRO

Christine Rønne Hansen, 2009

Page 25: Transparency:  Should CF-care centers ”open their books” and  publish treatment outcomes? PRO

Christine Rønne Hansen, 2010

Page 26: Transparency:  Should CF-care centers ”open their books” and  publish treatment outcomes? PRO

Christine Rønne Hansen, 2010

Page 27: Transparency:  Should CF-care centers ”open their books” and  publish treatment outcomes? PRO

Factors which affect the outcome of CF

• CF mutations + ’modifier genes’.- all mutations demand treament when lung infection is present

• Lung infection (main cause of death in CF)- Infection type (pseudomonas, burkholderia, achromobacter etc.)- Treatment - Age when infection debut- Individuel reaction to infection (immunrespons)- Individuel reaction to treatment (allergy)- Not possible to predict individual treatment effect or output

• The individual approch – Living with CF - Acceptance - Understand CF as a disease and it’s development - Capabillty of action

• Social factors - country vs city (zip codes), education, family situation

Page 28: Transparency:  Should CF-care centers ”open their books” and  publish treatment outcomes? PRO

PRO - Take Home Messages

• Most patients do not wish to change CF Care Center.

• Patients just want their doctors to give them access to the treatments with best clinical output.

• For patients, it’s not important by whom a treatment has been developed, as long as it works.

• Open data and open treatment standards bring the ’best treatments’ to patients faster.

• Open data and open treatment standards may expose the practice of some doctors. It may hurt doctors egos and personal feelings,

• BUT - The patients always come first.

• We pay the ultimate price for bad choices - with our lives.