Objectives

To investigate the cost-effectiveness of a chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) disease management (COPD-DM) programme in primary care, called RECODE, compared to usual care.

Design

A 2-year cluster-randomised controlled trial.

Setting

40 general practices in the western part of the Netherlands.

Participants

1086 patients with COPD according to GOLD (Global Initiative for COPD) criteria. Exclusion criteria were terminal illness, cognitive impairment, alcohol or drug misuse and inability to fill in Dutch questionnaires. Practices were included if they were willing to create a multidisciplinary COPD team.

Interventions

A multidisciplinary team of caregivers was trained in motivational interviewing, setting up individual care plans, exacerbation management, implementing clinical guidelines and redesigning the care process. In addition, clinical decision-making was supported by feedback reports provided by an ICT programme.

Main outcome measures

We investigated the impact on health outcomes (quality-adjusted life years (QALYs), Clinical COPD Questionnaire, St. George’s Respiratory Questionnaire and exacerbations) and costs (healthcare and societal perspective).

Results

The intervention costs were €324 per patient. Excluding these costs, the intervention group had €584 (95% CI €86 to €1046) higher healthcare costs than did the usual care group and €645 (95% CI €28 to €1190) higher costs from the societal perspective. Health outcomes were similar in both groups, except for 0.04 (95% CI -0.07 to -0.01) less QALYs in the intervention group.

Conclusions

This integrated care programme for patients with COPD that mainly included professionally directed interventions was not cost-effective in primary care.

Trial registration number

Netherlands Trial Register NTR2268.

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Overview publication

TitleCost-effectiveness of integrated COPD care: the RECODE cluster randomised trial.
DateNovember 1st, 2015
Issue nameBMJ open
Issue numberv5.10:e007284
DOI10.1136/bmjopen-2014-007284
PubMed26525419
AuthorsBoland MR, Kruis AL, Tsiachristas A, Assendelft WJ, Gussekloo J, Blom CM, Chavannes NH & Rutten-van Mölken MP
KeywordsHEALTH ECONOMICS, PRIMARY CARE, RESPIRATORY MEDICINE (see Thoracic Medicine)
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