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The characterisation of interstitial lung disease multidisciplinary team meetings: a global study

The characterisation of interstitial lung disease multidisciplinary team meetings: a global study
The characterisation of interstitial lung disease multidisciplinary team meetings: a global study
Multidisciplinary team (MDT) diagnosis of interstitial lung disease (ILD) has been proposed as a gold standard, but there are no formal recommendations for MDT process or composition and limited knowledge regarding prevalence in routine practice.We performed a systematic evaluation of ILD diagnostic practice across a range of healthcare settings around the world. Electronic questionnaires were distributed across all global regions via society and collaborators networks.
Responses from 457 unique centres across 64 countries were included in the analysis. Of the 350 (76.6%) centres holding formal meetings, the majority held face-to-face MDT meetings (80%), for a minimum of 30 min (93%), and discussed diagnosis (96.9%) and patient management (94.9%) at the meetings. Compared with non-academic and academic non-ILD centres, ILD academic centres reported a higher ILD caseload, held more formal MDT meetings, and were more likely to include histopathology and rheumatology specialists in their diagnostic team. Of the centres holding MDT meetings, 5.5% routinely discussed all new cases at such meetings.
An MDT approach to ILD diagnosis is consistently interpreted and widely implemented across a range of routine care settings around the world. This observation will inform future ILD diagnostic agreement studies and diagnostic pathway recommendations.
2312-0541
1-11
Richeldi, Luca
540f0654-88a1-4ce1-8141-fb1b1ec1071d
Launders, Naomi
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Martinez, Fernando
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Walsh, Simon
84771946-5888-4b0f-83a4-10de250fc770
Myers, Jeffrey
6edab072-23c1-4cd4-b196-bc3d29c77f41
Wang, Bonnie
3449a4d8-7bc7-475c-bf71-7017e9b97698
Jones, Mark
a6fd492e-058e-4e84-a486-34c6035429c1
Chisholm, Alison
c6500b69-2091-42de-9924-b5a849670010
Flaherty, Kevin
2457c196-c9ef-408e-973e-5b4864c191ab
Richeldi, Luca
540f0654-88a1-4ce1-8141-fb1b1ec1071d
Launders, Naomi
c9dabbe9-7220-4023-ae52-f800514e659b
Martinez, Fernando
e0bddb9f-aff5-4e83-a11f-06b4dd35158a
Walsh, Simon
84771946-5888-4b0f-83a4-10de250fc770
Myers, Jeffrey
6edab072-23c1-4cd4-b196-bc3d29c77f41
Wang, Bonnie
3449a4d8-7bc7-475c-bf71-7017e9b97698
Jones, Mark
a6fd492e-058e-4e84-a486-34c6035429c1
Chisholm, Alison
c6500b69-2091-42de-9924-b5a849670010
Flaherty, Kevin
2457c196-c9ef-408e-973e-5b4864c191ab

Richeldi, Luca, Launders, Naomi, Martinez, Fernando, Walsh, Simon, Myers, Jeffrey, Wang, Bonnie, Jones, Mark, Chisholm, Alison and Flaherty, Kevin (2019) The characterisation of interstitial lung disease multidisciplinary team meetings: a global study. ERJ Open Research, 5 (2), 1-11, [00209-2018]. (doi:10.1183/23120541.00209-2018).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Multidisciplinary team (MDT) diagnosis of interstitial lung disease (ILD) has been proposed as a gold standard, but there are no formal recommendations for MDT process or composition and limited knowledge regarding prevalence in routine practice.We performed a systematic evaluation of ILD diagnostic practice across a range of healthcare settings around the world. Electronic questionnaires were distributed across all global regions via society and collaborators networks.
Responses from 457 unique centres across 64 countries were included in the analysis. Of the 350 (76.6%) centres holding formal meetings, the majority held face-to-face MDT meetings (80%), for a minimum of 30 min (93%), and discussed diagnosis (96.9%) and patient management (94.9%) at the meetings. Compared with non-academic and academic non-ILD centres, ILD academic centres reported a higher ILD caseload, held more formal MDT meetings, and were more likely to include histopathology and rheumatology specialists in their diagnostic team. Of the centres holding MDT meetings, 5.5% routinely discussed all new cases at such meetings.
An MDT approach to ILD diagnosis is consistently interpreted and widely implemented across a range of routine care settings around the world. This observation will inform future ILD diagnostic agreement studies and diagnostic pathway recommendations.

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Accepted/In Press date: 5 February 2019
e-pub ahead of print date: 1 April 2019
Published date: 1 April 2019

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 430415
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/430415
ISSN: 2312-0541
PURE UUID: 18f676de-8292-43b6-9d9a-142ff071d39c
ORCID for Mark Jones: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-6308-6014

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Date deposited: 30 Apr 2019 16:30
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 03:56

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Contributors

Author: Luca Richeldi
Author: Naomi Launders
Author: Fernando Martinez
Author: Simon Walsh
Author: Jeffrey Myers
Author: Bonnie Wang
Author: Mark Jones ORCID iD
Author: Alison Chisholm
Author: Kevin Flaherty

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