Management of chronic headache with referral from primary care to direct access to MRI compared with Neurology services: an observational prospective study in London

Objectives To evaluate the cost, accessibility and patient satisfaction implications of two clinical pathways used in the management of chronic headache.Intervention Management of chronic headache following referral from Primary Care that differed in the first appointment, either a Neurology appoint...

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Main Authors: Vicky Goh, Paul McCrone, Shazia Afridi, Reza Razavi, Tiago Rua, Yvonne Akande, Charikleia Margariti, Juliana Ochulor, Joanna Turville
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMJ Publishing Group 2020-10-01
Series:BMJ Open
Online Access:https://bmjopen.bmj.com/content/10/10/e036097.full
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spelling doaj-93e76f4674a7483a9e5ee91eba3b8ea42021-05-06T09:34:06ZengBMJ Publishing GroupBMJ Open2044-60552020-10-01101010.1136/bmjopen-2019-036097Management of chronic headache with referral from primary care to direct access to MRI compared with Neurology services: an observational prospective study in LondonVicky Goh0Paul McCrone1Shazia Afridi2Reza Razavi3Tiago Rua4Yvonne Akande5Charikleia Margariti6Juliana Ochulor7Joanna Turville8School of Biomedical Engineering and Imaging Sciences, King’s College London, London, UKKing’s Health Economics, King’s College London, London, UK4 Department of Neurology, Guy’s and St Thomas’ NHS Trust, London, UK Imaging Science Division, King’s College London, London, UKSchool of Biomedical Engineering and Imaging Sciences, King's College London, London, United KingdomClinical Imaging and Medical Physics, Guy’s and Saint Thomas’ NHS Foundation Trust, London, UKClinical Imaging and Medical Physics, Guy’s and Saint Thomas’ NHS Foundation Trust, London, UKNeurology Department, Guy’s and Saint Thomas’ NHS Foundation Trust, London, UKClinical Imaging and Medical Physics, Guy’s and Saint Thomas’ NHS Foundation Trust, London, UKObjectives To evaluate the cost, accessibility and patient satisfaction implications of two clinical pathways used in the management of chronic headache.Intervention Management of chronic headache following referral from Primary Care that differed in the first appointment, either a Neurology appointment or an MRI brain scan.Design and setting A pragmatic, non-randomised, prospective, single-centre study at a Central Hospital in London.Participants Adult patients with chronic headache referred from primary to secondary care.Primary and secondary outcome measures Participants’ use of healthcare services and costs were estimated using primary and secondary care databases and questionnaires quarterly up to 12 months postrecruitment. Cost analyses were compared using generalised linear models. Secondary outcomes assessed: access to care, patient satisfaction, headache burden and self-perceived quality of life using headache-specific (Migraine Disability Assessment Scale and Headache Impact Test) and a generic questionnaire (5-level EQ-5D).Results Mean (SD) cost up to 6 months postrecruitment per participant was £578 (£420) for the Neurology group (n=128) and £245 (£172) for the MRI group (n=95), leading to an estimated mean cost difference of £333 (95% CI £253 to £413, p<0.001). The mean cost difference at 12 months increased to £518 (95% CI £401 to £637, p<0.001). When adjusted for baseline and follow-up imbalances between groups, this remained statistically significant. The utilisation of brain MRI improved access to care compared with the Neurology group (p<0.001). Participants in the Neurology group reported higher levels of satisfaction associated with the pathway and led to greater change in care management.Conclusion Direct referral to brain MRI from Primary Care led to cost-savings and quicker access to care but lower satisfaction levels when compared with referral to Neurology services. Further research into the use of brain MRI for a subset of patient population more likely to be reassured by a negative brain scan should be considered.Trial registration number NCT02753933.https://bmjopen.bmj.com/content/10/10/e036097.full
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Vicky Goh
Paul McCrone
Shazia Afridi
Reza Razavi
Tiago Rua
Yvonne Akande
Charikleia Margariti
Juliana Ochulor
Joanna Turville
spellingShingle Vicky Goh
Paul McCrone
Shazia Afridi
Reza Razavi
Tiago Rua
Yvonne Akande
Charikleia Margariti
Juliana Ochulor
Joanna Turville
Management of chronic headache with referral from primary care to direct access to MRI compared with Neurology services: an observational prospective study in London
BMJ Open
author_facet Vicky Goh
Paul McCrone
Shazia Afridi
Reza Razavi
Tiago Rua
Yvonne Akande
Charikleia Margariti
Juliana Ochulor
Joanna Turville
author_sort Vicky Goh
title Management of chronic headache with referral from primary care to direct access to MRI compared with Neurology services: an observational prospective study in London
title_short Management of chronic headache with referral from primary care to direct access to MRI compared with Neurology services: an observational prospective study in London
title_full Management of chronic headache with referral from primary care to direct access to MRI compared with Neurology services: an observational prospective study in London
title_fullStr Management of chronic headache with referral from primary care to direct access to MRI compared with Neurology services: an observational prospective study in London
title_full_unstemmed Management of chronic headache with referral from primary care to direct access to MRI compared with Neurology services: an observational prospective study in London
title_sort management of chronic headache with referral from primary care to direct access to mri compared with neurology services: an observational prospective study in london
publisher BMJ Publishing Group
series BMJ Open
issn 2044-6055
publishDate 2020-10-01
description Objectives To evaluate the cost, accessibility and patient satisfaction implications of two clinical pathways used in the management of chronic headache.Intervention Management of chronic headache following referral from Primary Care that differed in the first appointment, either a Neurology appointment or an MRI brain scan.Design and setting A pragmatic, non-randomised, prospective, single-centre study at a Central Hospital in London.Participants Adult patients with chronic headache referred from primary to secondary care.Primary and secondary outcome measures Participants’ use of healthcare services and costs were estimated using primary and secondary care databases and questionnaires quarterly up to 12 months postrecruitment. Cost analyses were compared using generalised linear models. Secondary outcomes assessed: access to care, patient satisfaction, headache burden and self-perceived quality of life using headache-specific (Migraine Disability Assessment Scale and Headache Impact Test) and a generic questionnaire (5-level EQ-5D).Results Mean (SD) cost up to 6 months postrecruitment per participant was £578 (£420) for the Neurology group (n=128) and £245 (£172) for the MRI group (n=95), leading to an estimated mean cost difference of £333 (95% CI £253 to £413, p<0.001). The mean cost difference at 12 months increased to £518 (95% CI £401 to £637, p<0.001). When adjusted for baseline and follow-up imbalances between groups, this remained statistically significant. The utilisation of brain MRI improved access to care compared with the Neurology group (p<0.001). Participants in the Neurology group reported higher levels of satisfaction associated with the pathway and led to greater change in care management.Conclusion Direct referral to brain MRI from Primary Care led to cost-savings and quicker access to care but lower satisfaction levels when compared with referral to Neurology services. Further research into the use of brain MRI for a subset of patient population more likely to be reassured by a negative brain scan should be considered.Trial registration number NCT02753933.
url https://bmjopen.bmj.com/content/10/10/e036097.full
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