影响临床医生为急性特发性和多发性硬化症相关性视神经炎开具皮质类固醇处方的因素:定性研究。

IF 2 4区 医学 Q3 CLINICAL NEUROLOGY
Journal of Neuro-Ophthalmology Pub Date : 2025-06-01 Epub Date: 2024-08-16 DOI:10.1097/WNO.0000000000002219
Lindsey B De Lott, Lizbeth Gonzalez, Timothy C Guetterman, Kevin A Kerber, Brian J Zikmund-Fisher
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:使用皮质类固醇治疗特发性和多发性硬化相关性视神经炎(I/MS-ON)患者很常见。然而,视神经炎治疗试验(Optic Neuritis Treatment Trial)和荟萃分析(meta-analyses)证实,很少有患者能从中获益,而且视觉获益的临床意义值得怀疑、持续时间短暂,并伴有潜在的危害。本研究旨在揭示临床医生做出治疗决定的广泛因素,并确定这些因素如何影响皮质类固醇在 I/MS-ON 中的使用:我们对全美 15 家学术机构和私人诊所的神经科医生、神经眼科医生和急诊科临床医生进行了一对一的半结构化定性访谈。访谈指南使用了理论领域框架和一个小故事来探讨可能影响确诊 I/MS-ON 决策的众多因素。我们使用归纳式主题分析法对记录誊本进行了分析,以生成主题:在达到主题饱和之前,我们共采访了 22 位临床医生:8 位神经眼科医生、8 位神经内科医生和 6 位急诊医学 (EM) 临床医生(2 位医生助理和 4 位医生)。所有神经眼科医生和几乎所有神经科医生(8 位中的 7 位)都了解皮质类固醇治疗 I/MS-ON 的风险/益处。然而,神经眼科医生在皮质类固醇治疗建议方面各不相同(3 位建议治疗,2 位建议观察,3 位建议共同决策),而所有神经内科医生都建议使用皮质类固醇,这表明仅了解皮质类固醇的风险/益处并不能驱动决策制定。急诊科临床医生并不了解皮质类固醇治疗 I/MS-ON 的风险/益处,而是依赖于神经科医生的治疗建议。推荐使用皮质类固醇的临床医生个人认为,皮质类固醇对那些视力下降更严重的患者有益,可以缓解疼痛,让患者更早恢复工作,或者很容易减轻副作用。他们还认为,开具类固醇处方是 "有所作为 "的主要方法,这符合医疗服务提供者的关键角色。不建议使用皮质类固醇或持中立态度的临床医生认为风险并不小,认为讨论治疗方案的权衡也是 "做一些事情",并将患者的偏好纳入其中:结论:了解皮质类固醇的风险/益处对于循证 I/MS-ON 实践是必要的,但还不够。临床医生如何治疗急性 I/MS-ON 患者的差异在很大程度上受社会心理因素的影响,如对皮质类固醇风险/益处权衡的信念以及临床医生提供治疗的角色。支持对 I/MS-ON 治疗做出循证决策的干预措施需要提供风险/效益信息,以支持具有不同专业水平的临床医生,纳入患者的偏好,并使观察选择正常化。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Factors That Influence Clinician Prescribing of Corticosteroids for Acute Idiopathic and Multiple Sclerosis-Associated Optic Neuritis: A Qualitative Study.

Background: Treatment with corticosteroids is common for patients with idiopathic and multiple sclerosis-associated optic neuritis (I/MS-ON). Yet, the Optic Neuritis Treatment Trial and meta-analyses confirm that few patients benefit and that visual benefit is of questionable clinical significance, short-lived, and comes with potential harms. The purpose of this study was to uncover the breadth of factors that underlie clinicians' treatment decisions and determine how these factors may influence corticosteroid use for I/MS-ON.

Methods: We performed semistructured, one-on-one, qualitative interviews with neurologists, neuro-ophthalmologists, and emergency department clinicians at 15 academic and private practices across the United States. The interview guide used the Theoretical Domain Framework and a vignette to explore numerous factors that might influence decision making for definite I/MS-ON. We analyzed transcripts using inductive thematic analysis to generate themes.

Results: A total of 22 clinicians were interviewed before thematic saturation was reached: 8 neuro-ophthalmologists, 8 neurologists, and 6 emergency medicine (EM) clinicians (2 physician assistants, 4 physicians). All neuro-ophthalmologists and nearly all neurologists (7 of 8) were aware of risks/benefits of corticosteroid treatment for I/MS-ON. However, neuro-ophthalmologists varied in their corticosteroid treatment recommendation (n = 3 recommended treatment, n = 2 recommended observation, n = 3 recommended shared decision making), whereas all neurologists recommended corticosteroids, indicating that knowledge of corticosteroid risk/benefit alone does not drive decision making. EM clinicians were not aware of risk/benefits of corticosteroid treatment for I/MS-ON and relied on the treatment recommendations of neurologists. Clinicians recommending corticosteroids held personal beliefs that corticosteroids benefit those with worse vision loss, relieve pain, allow earlier return to work, or have easily mitigated side effects. They also perceived that prescribing steroid was the principal method of "doing something," which fit a key provider role. Clinicians who did not recommend corticosteroids or were neutral perceived the risks as nontrivial, considered discussing treatment trade-offs as "doing something" and incorporated patient preferences.

Conclusions: Knowledge of risk/benefits of corticosteroids are necessary but not sufficient for evidence-based I/MS-ON practice. Variation in how clinicians treat patients with acute I/MS-ON is influenced largely by psychosocial factors, such as beliefs about corticosteroid risk/benefit trade-offs and the role of the clinician to provide treatment. Interventions to support evidence-based decision making for I/MS-ON treatment will need to provide risk/benefit information to support clinicians with varying levels of expertise, incorporate patient preference, and normalize the option to observe.

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来源期刊
Journal of Neuro-Ophthalmology
Journal of Neuro-Ophthalmology 医学-临床神经学
CiteScore
2.80
自引率
13.80%
发文量
593
审稿时长
6-12 weeks
期刊介绍: The Journal of Neuro-Ophthalmology (JNO) is the official journal of the North American Neuro-Ophthalmology Society (NANOS). It is a quarterly, peer-reviewed journal that publishes original and commissioned articles related to neuro-ophthalmology.
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