Impact of COVID-19 pandemic on the management of patients with RA: a survey of rheumatologists in six European countries

Author:

Machado Pedro M1ORCID,Verschueren Patrick2,Grainger Rebecca3ORCID,Jones Hannah4,Piercy James5,van Beneden Katrien6,Caporali Roberto78,Dejaco Christian9ORCID,Fautrel Bruno10

Affiliation:

1. Centre for Rheumatology and Department of Neuromuscular Diseases, University College London , London, UK

2. Rheumatology Department, KU Leuven , Leuven, Belgium

3. Department of Medicine, University of Otago , Dunedin, New Zealand

4. Autoimmune Franchise, Adelphi Real World , Bollington, UK

5. Health Economics and Outcomes Research, Adelphi Real World , Bollington, UK

6. Medical Affairs, Galapagos NV , Mechelen, Belgium

7. Department of Clinical Sciences and Community Health, University of Milan , Milan, Italy

8. Division of Clinical Rheumatology, ASST Pini-CTO , Milan, Italy

9. Rheumatology, Medical University of Graz , Graz, Austria

10. Service de Rhumatologie, Sorbonne Université-Assistance Publique-Hôpitaux de Paris , Paris, France

Abstract

Abstract Objective We aimed to describe, from the perspective of rheumatologists in Europe, how the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic has impacted their management of people with RA and the continuing medical education of physicians. Methods Rheumatologists participating in the Adelphi RA Disease Specific ProgrammeTM in six European countries were contacted in August and September 2020 for a telephone survey. Rheumatologists were asked seven attitudinal questions on changes to patient management, prescription behaviour and continuing education owing to COVID-19. Results were summarized with descriptive statistics. Results The telephone survey was completed by 284 rheumatologists. The most commonly reported changes to patient management were increased utilization of video/telephone consultations (66.5% of respondents), fewer visits (58.5%) and limiting physical contact (58.1%). Furthermore, 67.9% of rheumatologists who indicated that prescribing behaviour had changed switched their patients to self-administered medication, and 60.7% reported not starting patients on targeted synthetic DMARDs, biologic originator DMARDs or biosimilar DMARDs. In total, 57.6% of rheumatologists believed that changes in management would persist. Rheumatologists reported that 38.0% of patients expressed concerns about how COVID-19 would impact treatment, including access to treatment and the risk of infection. The biggest impact on rheumatologist education was a switch to online training and conferences. Conclusion All countries saw changes in patient management and prescribing behaviour, including the rapid uptake of telemedicine. It is important that the international rheumatology community learns from these experiences to prepare better for future pandemics and to address ongoing rheumatologist shortages.

Funder

Galapagos NV

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Rheumatology

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