Jump to: Page Content, Site Navigation, Site Search,
You are seeing this message because your web browser does not support basic web standards. Find out more about why this message is appearing and what you can do to make your experience on this site better.
B C Delaney Department of Primary Care and General
Practice, Division of Primary Care, Public and Occupational Health,
University of Birmingham Medical School, Birmingham B15 2TT
Correspondence to: B C Delaney
b.c.delaney{at}bham.ac.uk
| |
Abstract |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Objective:
To determine the cost effectiveness of a
strategy of near patient Helicobacter pylori testing and
endoscopy for managing dyspepsia.
Design:
Randomised controlled trial.
Setting:
31 UK primary care centres.
Participants:
478 patients under 50 years old
presenting with dyspepsia of longer than four weeks duration.
Interventions:
Near patient testing for H
pylori and open access endoscopy for patients with positive
results. Control patients received acid suppressing drugs or specialist
referral at general practitioner's discretion.
Main outcome measures:
Cost effectiveness based on
improvement in symptoms and use of resources at 12 months; quality of life.
Results:
40% of the study group tested positive for H pylori. 45% of study patients had endoscopy
compared with 25% of controls. More peptic ulcers were diagnosed in
the study group (7.4% v 2.1%, P=0.011). Paired comparison
of symptom scores and quality of life showed that all patients improved
over time with no difference between study and control groups. No
significant differences were observed in rates of prescribing,
consultation, or referral. Costs were higher in the study group
(£367.85 v £253.16 per patient).
Conclusions:
The test and endoscopy strategy increases endoscopy rates over usual practice in primary care. The additional cost is not offset by benefits in symptom relief or quality of life.
|
What is already known on this topic
What this paper adds
|
| |
Introduction |
|---|
|
|
|---|
The NHS spent £1.1bn on managing dyspepsia in 1998,1 and 450 000 patients had endoscopy. If endoscopy is reserved for patients who test positive for Helicobacter pylori, it should maximise the yield of peptic ulceration (for which eradication therapy is effective 2 3 ) and reduce overall endoscopy workload. Patients negative for H pylori can be given empirical acid suppression treatment.
Two non-randomised studies in secondary care have examined this "test and endoscopy" strategy. A retrospective cohort study found that positive H pylori test results were highly predictive of peptic ulcer and suggested that screening out negative patients could have reduced endoscopy workload by 23%.4 A controlled before and after study found that test and endoscopy was as effective in reducing dyspeptic symptoms as the previous practice of endoscopy in all patients referred.5 However, the study did not follow up the whole screened cohort, and the control group consisted only of patients negative for H pylori who had had endoscopy. The groups are not therefore representative. Furthermore, all the patients examined in these two studies had been referred for endoscopy by their general practitioner. The test and endoscopy strategy has not been investigated in a randomised controlled trial, and there are no studies based in primary care.
Near patient testing allows general practitioners to base their initial
management on the results of tests.6 However, there are
few outcome studies of near patient tests in clinical decision making.7 A recent systematic review of H pylori
tests in primary care showed that the Helisal rapid blood test has
variable performance in primary care, with a sensitivity of 77-92% and
a specificity of 56-69%.8 However, when the test was
evaluated in the population local to our trial, the sensitivity was
89% and specificity 84%.9 Analysis with a Markov model
suggested that the test would be cost effective.10 We
therefore used the test in this study to determine the cost
effectiveness of the test and endoscopy strategy in primary care.
| |
Participants and methods |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Participants
All patients aged 18-49 years who consulted their general
practitioner with dyspepsia of more than four weeks duration were
eligible for the trial. We excluded patients who had had endoscopy or a
positive barium meal examination in the past three years, who were
unable to give informed consent, or who were unfit for endoscopy.
Dyspepsia was defined as epigastric pain or heartburn with or without
nausea and bloating.11
Randomisation and concealment of allocation
We randomised patients individually using sealed, opaque,
sequentially numbered envelopes. The randomisation schedule was done on
a 60:40 basis (study: control) and used a computerised random number
sequence without blocking or stratification. We kept a log of numbers
issued to practices.
Interventions
Patients were randomised to "test and endoscopy" or to
usual management. The Helisal test (Cortecs Diagnostics, Deeside) was done by the general practitioner or practice nurse. Endoscopies on patients with positive results were carried out
according to usual practice at open access services at six local
hospitals. Patients with negative results were not referred for
endoscopy but received empirical acid suppressing drugs chosen by their
general practitioner.
Outcomes
The main outcomes were effectiveness (assessed by symptoms)
and costs of managing dyspepsia. We measured symptoms at recruitment
and 15-18 months using the Birmingham dyspepsia symptom
score, a postal measure previously validated in the local population.12 We calculated the costs of dyspepsia from a
health service perspective. We assessed use of resources in primary and secondary care for 12 months after randomisation by abstracting data
from primary care case records. All data were double entered, and we
verified inconsistencies by referring to the original case records.
Analysis
We analysed data by intention to treat. A sample of 430 patients would detect differences of 2 units (SD=4) in the dyspepsia
score, 9 units (SD=22) in the pain dimension of the quality of life,
and 8 units (SD=20) in the emotion and social dimensions, and would
detect a reduction in general practice consultation rates from 3 to 1 a
year (SD=3). These estimates were based on a power of 90% at the 5%
significance level and assumed 25% loss to follow up. Ethical approval
was obtained from all local research ethics committees.
|
| |
Results |
|---|
|
|
|---|
The 31 participating practices had a registered population of 195 700. Four hundred and seventy eight patients entered the trial; 285 were randomised to "test and endoscopy" and 193 to usual management. The patients were recruited over three years from May 1995 at a mean rate of 2 per 1000 registered practice population per month. Full details of ascertainment and recruitment by practice have been reported.19
|
Figure 1 shows the trial profile. Full data on use of resources were collected for 475 patients (99%). Records for three patients could not be traced. We obtained evaluable symptom scores and quality of life scores from 290 (61%) patients. Two hundred and seventy three (57%) patients returned satisfaction questionnaires. The baseline characteristics of the patients entered into the analysis were similar in the two randomised groups (table 2).
|
Interventions and diagnostic findings
The Helisal test gave positive results in 40% (112/278) of
patients (fig 2 ). The expected prevalence of H pylori
in this population was 30%.12 We used the test
performance and the observed numbers of positive and negative results
to calculate underlying prevalence and predictive values. With a
sensitivity of 89% and a specificity of 84%, a positive rate of 40%
reflected an underlying prevalence of 33%.9 On this
basis, 27% of positive results and 6% of negative results would be
false.
|
2=
6.4, df=1, P=0.011). Compared with the control patients, fewer patients
in the study group had oesophagitis (17% v 31%,
2= 4.1, df=1, P=0.04) and more had duodenitis (19%
v 6%,
2= 4.3, df=1, P=0.04; table 3
).
|
Outcomes and costs
Symptoms and quality of life scores in the test and control
groups significantly improved by 18 months. There was no evidence of a
difference in the size of improvement between the groups (table 4).
Non-respondents were more likely to smoke and were younger than
respondents (smoking odds ratio=1.63, 95% confidence interval 1 to
2.65; age 0.96, 0.93 to 0.99), but no difference in sex or baseline
symptoms was observed. Analysis of covariance found that age and
smoking had no significant effect on symptoms or quality of life. No
significant differences were observed in the satisfaction
questionnaire.
|
|
|
| |
Discussion |
|---|
|
|
|---|
In contrast to non-randomised studies in secondary care, 4 5 our study shows that the test and endoscopy strategy increased endoscopy referral rates by almost twofold over usual practice. Some of the increase in referral was due to the choice of non-invasive test. However, even if a carbon-13 urea breath test had been used, at least 92 patients would have been referred (33% of the total would test H pylori positive) compared with the 69 (25%) expected from the rate in the control group.
We found that test and endoscopy did not improve dyspeptic symptoms or quality of life compared with usual management. The number of questionnaires returned was lower than expected, but the numbers returned were still large enough to detect the predefined differences with adequate power (80%). As the trial was subject to 39% attrition on the symptom and quality of life scores, the possibility of bias needs to be considered. Logistic regression analysis for the effect of differential follow up by age and smoking status had no significant effect on the result.
Investigation of dyspeptic patients by test and endoscopy increased the use of resources without producing benefit. Contrary to expectation, there was no fall in primary care consultations for dyspepsia or outpatient attendance in the test and endoscopy group. Most patients investigated had non-ulcer dyspepsia, and the number of peptic ulcers was too small to detect an effect of H pylori eradication. The low prevalence of treatable disease in patients under 50 means that relatively expensive methods of case finding such as endoscopy are not cost effective. Empirical prescribing is therefore the best treatment. In older patients, however, who have a greater frequency of treatable disease, a primary care based randomised controlled trial has shown that initial endoscopy may be cost effective compared with empirical management.20
Although acid suppression is effective for undiagnosed dyspepsia,
especially reflux symptoms,21 treatment with these drugs misses the opportunity to cure an important minority of patients with
recurrent peptic ulcer disease due to H pylori. Eradication of H pylori may also have a small but important effect in
non-ulcer dyspepsia, possibly by preventing the development of ulcers
in susceptible patients.22 It is unclear whether a
strategy to test for H pylori and then eradicate is cost
effective as an initial management strategy in primary care. Future
trials should evaluate the cost effectiveness of this strategy compared
with empirical prescribing. Until then, near patient testing for
H pylori is probably unwarranted in patients under 50.
| |
Acknowledgments |
|---|
We thank Dr A Briggs, Health Economics Research Centre, Oxford University, for advice on the economic analysis and Dr R P Walt, Heartlands Hospital, Birmingham, Dr B Cooper, City Hospital Birmingham, and Mr M Hallissey, Queen Elizabeth Hospital, Birmingham, for providing open access endoscopy for study patients. We thank the following practices for enrolling patients: Bellevue Medical Centre, Riverbrook Medical Centre, Laurie Pike Health Centre, Frankley Health Centre, Dr M Fernell and partners, Cofton Medical Centre, Hill Top Surgery, Dr J Crosland and partners, Northfield Health Centre, Swanswell Medical Centre, Dr D Taylor and partners, Ley Hill Surgery, The Reabrook Surgery, University Medical Centre, Ash Tree Medical Centre, Dr J Parle and partners, Dr B Dicker and partner, Green Ridge Surgery, Harborne Medical Practice, Dr Hayes, Dr P Machin and partners, Fernley Medical Centre, Dr E Pennington and partners, Severn House Surgery, Dr N Gaballa, Moor Green Medical Centre, Dr P Beyer, Northgate Medical Centre, Yardley Wood Health Centre, Grange Hill Surgery, West Heath Surgery, Stockland Green Health Centre, Kendrick Surgery, James Preston Health Centre, Ashfurlong Health Centre, Medical Centre, Selly Oak Health Centre, Dr B Pattni, Kingsmount Surgery, Church Lane Medical Centre, Hollyoaks Medical Centre, Mirfield Surgery, Castle Practice.
Contributors: BCD, SW, and FDRH designed and managed the study. BCD, AW, and VR recruited the practices. Data were collected and entered by VR and LR. BCD, AW, and LR coded the data, and AR analysed the data. BCD did the economic analysis. All authors contributed to writing the paper. BCD is the guarantor.
| |
Footnotes |
|---|
Funding: The study was funded by the NHS research and development primary secondary care interface programme, grant no PSI 37-01 and the NHS Executive, West Midlands. The Astra Foundation supplied the Helisal tests. BCD holds a NHS research and development national primary care career scientist award. LR holds a NHS Executive, West Midlands new blood fellowship.
Competing interests: None declared.
| |
References |
|---|
|
|
|---|
| 1. | Asante M, Lord J, Mendall M, Northfield T. Endoscopy for Helicobacter pylori seronegative young dyspeptic patients: an economic evaluation based on a randomized trial. Eur J Gastroenterol Hepatol 1999; 11(8): 851-856[Medline]. |
| 2. |
Axon ATR, Bell GD, Jones RH, Quine MA, McCloy RF.
Guidelines on appropriate indications for upper gastrointestinal endoscopy.
BMJ
1995;
310:
853-856 |
| 3. | Chiba N, Lahaie R, Fedorak RN, Bailey R, Veldhuyzen vZS, Bernucci B. Helicobacter pylori and peptic ulcer disease. Current evidence for management strategies. Can Fam Physician 1998; 44: 1481-1488[Medline]. |
| 4. | Sobala GM, Crabtree JE, Pentith JA, Rathbone BJ, Shallcross TM, Wyatt JI, et al. Screening dyspepsia by serology to Helicobacter pylori. Lancet 1991; 338: 94-96[CrossRef][Medline]. |
| 5. | Patel P, Khulusi S, Mendall MA, Lloyd R, Jazrawi R, Maxwell JD, et al. Prospective screening of dyspeptic patients by Helicobacter pylori serology. Lancet 1995; 346: 1315-1318[CrossRef][Medline]. |
| 6. |
Hobbs R.
Near patient testing in primary care.
BMJ
1996;
312:
263-264 |
| 7. |
Delaney BC, Hyde CJ, McManus RJ, Wilson S, Fitzmaurice DA, Jowett S, et al.
Systematic review of near patient test evaluations in primary care.
BMJ
1999;
319:
824-827 |
| 8. | Roberts AP, Childs SM, Rubin G, de Wit NJ. Tests for Helicobacter pylori: a critical appraisal from primary care. Fam Pract 2000; 17: S12-S20[Abstract]. |
| 9. | Delaney BC, Holder RL, Allan TF, Kenkre J, Hobbs FDR, et al. Performance of a whole blood point of care test for Helicobacter pylori in primary care: a Bayesian analysis [Abstract]. Gastroenterology 1999; 116(suppl 4): G0228. |
| 10. | Delaney B, Hobbs FD. Near patient tests for Helicobacter pylori in primary care: how accurate do they need to be? Eur J Gen Pract 1998; 4: 149-154. |
| 11. | Management of dyspepsia: report of a working party. Lancet 1988; i: 576-579. |
| 12. |
Hobbs FDR, Delaney BC, Rowsby M, Kenkre JE.
Effect of Helicobacter pylori eradication therapy on dyspeptic symptoms in primary care.
Fam Pract
1996;
13:
225-228 |
| 13. | Korman MG. Quality of life in duodenal ulcer disease. Scand J Gastroenterol 1993; suppl 199: 28-31. |
| 14. | Baker R. Characteristics of practices, general practitioners and patients related to levels of patients' satisfaction with consultations. Br J Gen Pract 1996; 46: 601-605[Medline]. |
| 15. | Netten A, Dennett J, Knight J. Unit costs of health and social care. Canterbury: University of Kent, 1998. |
| 16. |
The new NHS reference costs.
London: NHS Executive, 1998.
|
| 17. | British Medical Association, Royal Pharmaceutical Society of Great Britain. British national formulary. London: BMA, RPS, 1997. |
| 18. |
Thompson SG, Barber JA.
How should cost data in pragmatic randomised trials be analysed?
BMJ
2000;
320:
1197-1200 |
| 19. |
Wilson S, Delaney BC, Roalfe A, Roberts L, Redman V, Wearn A, et al.
Randomised controlled trials in primary care: case study.
BMJ
2000;
321:
24-27 |
| 20. | Delaney BC, Wilson S, Roalfe A, Roberts L, Redman V, Wearn AM, et al. Cost effectiveness of initial endoscopy for dyspepsia in patients over the age of 50 years: a randomised controlled trial in primary care. Lancet 2000; 356: 1965-1969[CrossRef][Medline]. |
| 21. | Delaney BC, Innes MA, Deeks J, Wilson S, Oakes R, Moayyedi P, et al. Initial management strategies for dyspepsia Cochrane Database Syst Rev 2000;(2):CD001961. |
| 22. |
Moayyedi P, Soo S, Deeks J, Innes MA, Forman D, Delaney BC.
A systematic review and economic analysis of the cost effectiveness of H pylori eradication therapy in non-ulcer dyspepsia.
BMJ
2000;
321:
659-664 |
(Accepted 23 January 2001)
Read all Rapid Responses