Impact of the Clinical Pharmacist in Rheumatology Practice: A Systematic Review
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Search Strategy
2.2. Study Selection
- ▪
- Studies conducted specifically in the rheumatology sector or concerning a clearly identified rheumatic pathology.
- ▪
- Studies describing pharmaceutical care activities, including the following [13]:
- -
- Medication reconciliation;
- -
- Medication review;
- -
- Pharmaceutical intervention;
- -
- Personalized pharmaceutical plan (PPP).
- ▪
- Studies in both the French and English languages.
- ▪
- Abstracts for conferences, study protocols, and articles not describing specific clinical pharmacy activities (reviews, meta-analyses, etc.) were excluded.
2.3. Study Evaluation
- For randomized studies: the CONSORT (Consolidated Standards of Reporting Trials) checklist.
- For observational studies: the STROBE (Strengthening the Reporting of Observational studies in Epidemiology) checklist.
- For qualitative studies: the SRQR (Standards for Reporting Qualitative Research) checklist.
- For health economic studies: the CHEERS (Consolidated Health Economic Evaluation Reporting Standards) checklist.
3. Results
3.1. Medication Reconciliation and Medication Review
3.2. Hospital Pharmaceutical Interventions
3.3. Ambulatory Pharmaceutical Interventions
3.4. Studies’ Quality
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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References | Number of Patients | Design | Main Objective | Number of MDs * (AR **%) | PI *** (AR **%) | Field | Impact (HAS Scale) | Comments |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Boursier et al. [14] | 318 | Observational study | Assessing the value of medication reconciliation in admission to a university rheumatology department | 248 (100%) 1.2 ± 1.62 DVNI/ patient | NK | Omission (54%) Dosage (39.9%) | At least 51.6% MDs meaningful 2% major | Impact of pairing of rheumatologist and pharmacist Prioritization criterion Potential polypharmacy |
Soubieux et al. [22] | 334 | Observational study | Impact of the presence of a pharmacist on drug iatrogenicity | At admission: 385 (93%) At discharge: 132 (95%) 1.66 DVNI/Patient | 196 (93.3%) | PI: dosage (38.8%) MD: omission (55% at admission and 46% at discharge) and dosage (27%) | * PI: 30.9% meaningful and 12.9% major * MD: 33.8% meaningful and 7.6% major | Impact of rheumatologist Prioritization criterion Potential polypharmacy All physicians and patients found pharmacist intervention useful |
Yailian et al. [23] | 373 | Observational study | Evaluating the impact/relevance of pharmaceutical interventions from the point of view of a pharmacist and a rheumatologist | NK | 461 (67.2%) | Mode of administration (31.7%) Dosage (24.5%) | * Physician: 10% major and 1PI critical * Pharmacist: 20% major and no PIs critical | Impact of pairing of rheumatologist and pharmacist |
Coursier et al. [15] | Not specified | Cost minimization analysis | Cost savings through pharmacist intervention | NA | 610 (83.4%) | Mode of administration (25.4%) | NA | Cost saving: EUR 5940 |
References | Number of Patients/Methodology/ Main Objective | Theme/Disease/ Pharmaceutical Intervention | Main Results | Comments |
---|---|---|---|---|
Peter et al. [34] | 776/ Retrospective observational study/ Assess adherence, persistence, and number of switches | SC * biotherapy/ Rheumatoid arthritis/ Identify and resolve obstacles to adherence | Adhesion and persistence superior to the given literature | Observational retrospective study |
Hall JJ et al. [30] | 62/ Observational study/ Patient satisfaction | SC * biotherapy/ Inflammatory arthritis/ Medication therapy management | Improved general patient satisfaction and giving information in the group with collaborative pharmacist–physician management (significant) No significant difference in the mean score for satisfaction across the 6 dimensions | The pharmacist evaluates the efficacy and tolerance of the biotherapy + evaluation of the disease with clinical and biological scores |
Petry et al. [27] | 480/ Retrospective cohort study/ Reduction in primary non-compliance | SC * biotherapy/ Inflammatory rheumatism/ Medication therapy management and resolving treatment-related issues such as insurance coverage | Primary non-adherence is much lower in this study with the clinical pharmacy service than in the literature (primary non-adherence: 2.1%) | This decrease is attributed to the dedicated pharmacy service, which considers not only clinical aspects (patient counseling) but also financial aspects (ensuring the patient is insured). |
Romano et al. [37] | 124/ Retrospective cohort study/ Achieve and maintain serum uric acid of less than 6 mg/dL | Uricemia follow-up/ Gout/ Follow-up of patients on hypouricemia therapy | Higher proportion of patients reaching the uricemia target in the pharmacist group (75.8% vs. 30.6%) than in the physician group. For patients reaching the target, the speed was identical in the 2 groups, but with a lower dose for the pharmacist group. | NA |
Issa et al. [36] | 100/ Cross-sectional before–after study/ Pain relief | Transdermal glucosamine sulfate and capsaicin/ Joint pain/ Medication therapy management | Significant decrease in pain, limitation of mobility, use of other analgesics, and number of visits to the doctor Increase in mild and moderate stiffness and decrease in severe to moderate stiffness | NA |
Lattard et al. [20] | 35/ Non-randomized interventional study/ Improved patient knowledge | Opioid drug/ Pain in rheumatology/ Medication therapy management | Decrease in incorrect beliefs and increase in knowledge about opioid drugs Non-significant decrease in duration of opioid treatment (33.5 for control group vs. 14.0 for intervention group) | Pharmaceutical intervention at initiation of strong opioid therapy Result not significant, probably due to lack of patients |
Guttermann et al. [19] | 89/ Randomized single-center study/ Improved knowledge and better MPR scores | SC * Biotherapy/ Ankylosing spondylitis/ Medication therapy management | Improved knowledge at 6 months (significant vs. control) Tendency (non-significant) to improve the already high level of membership No impact in disease activity All patients satisfied | A study conducted over a short period and with few patients |
References | Number of Patient/Methodology/Main Objective/Pharmaceutical Intervention | Main Results |
---|---|---|
Ernst et al. [16] | 461/ Observational study/ Identify drug-related problems using a health status questionnaire/Medication review | good capacity of the pharmacist to identify and act on drug-related problems good correlation between drug-related problems and quality of life impairment |
Ernst et al. [28] | 461/ Observational study/ Assess the link between drug-related problems and the quality of life of patients suffering from musculoskeletal disorders/ Quality of life questionnaire, health status monitoring, and medication-related issues | 926 drug-related problems identified in 461 patients. 2 types of problems with a significant association with negative change in MCS: poor treatment and untreated indication (item also significantly correlated with MCS) |
Grech et al. [18] | 88/ Observational study/ Assess personalized pharmaceutical care in a specialized rheumatology clinic/ Medication therapy management | Setting up of pharmaceutical consultations to identify problems in the pharmaceutical sector in patients treated with methotrexate, with delivery of a booklet on this treatment. 84% of patients found the methotrexate booklet useful, some even said that such an initiative would be useful for other drugs. 106 pharmaceutical problems were identified in 88 patients: 72% were real problems that required a change in treatment. Concerning quality of life: significant improvement in SF36 and HAQ scores after intervention |
Marra et al. [32] | 194/ Observational study/ Diagnosis of osteoarthritis by community pharmacists/ Screening for arthritis using a questionnaire | Pharmacists in pharmacies can identify osteoarthritis in patients with chronic knee pain: 83% of patients diagnosed with osteoarthritis by pharmacists using a questionnaire with arthritis 82% of these patients without prior diagnosis Faster support |
Huang et al. [31] | 47/ Comparative study without randomization/ Pharmaceutical intervention to improve adherence and effectiveness of gout treatment/ Pharmaceutical care | Results similar to those of Goldfien: 31% of the intervention group reached the target zone for uricemia at one year (p = 0.3%) |
Mikuls et al. [33] | 1463/ Randomized study/ Pharmaceutical intervention to improve adherence and effectiveness of gout treatment/ Phone call | Patient intervention group: better adherence than the control group (50 vs. 37% p < 0.001) More patients in the intervention group reached the target uricemia rate (30 vs. 15% p < 0.001) |
Petkvova et al. [21] | 86/ Randomized study/ Quality of life of patients/ Outpatient therapeutic education | After education: significant improvement for the intervention group in pain frequency vs. control group; significant improvement in medication adherence; significant decrease in emergency calls in the intervention group vs. before education (no difference for the control group); significant decrease in visits to the attending physician and number of adverse events after education in the intervention group (not in the control group). |
Zwikker et al. [24] | 123/ Randomized study/ Improvement of adherence of RA patients/ Motivational interviews | No difference between the two groups. Only after one year did patients in the intervention group have fewer incorrect beliefs about their treatment than in the control group. |
Goldfien et al. [29] | 77/ Randomized study/ Improve adherence and effectiveness of gout treatment/ Pharmaceutical care (prescription of laboratory tests or therapeutic adjustment by pharmacist) | In total, 35% of patients in the intervention group (13/37) reached the target level of 6 mg/dL at 26 weeks, compared to 13% in the control group (but no significant difference) Greater decrease in uricemia in the intervention group than in the control group (singular) |
Thapa et al. [35] | 158/ Randomized study/ Change in pain levels and improvement in physical functionality/ Education and medication review | The pharmaceutical intervention improved patients’ knowledge and pain scores; however, physical functionality, depression, and quality of life remained unchanged |
Hay et al. [17] | 325/ Randomized study/ Change in pain levels/ Review of medication and patient information | The pharmacist helped reduce pain similarly to the physiotherapist, and there was slightly lessened functionality, but better than the control group, at 3 months. In the long term, there was no significant difference except for the physiotherapist, who reduced visits to the primary care physician. |
Zwikker et al. [25] | 228/ Qualitative study/ Motivational interviews to improve adherence of RA patients | Review of the literature: the problem of adherence Cross-sectional study: association between incorrect beliefs and non-adherence Discussion group: non-adherent patients have many incorrect beliefs Implementation of a motivational interview with the pharmacist. Pilot: patients appreciated the intervention (even if they found it a bit short) |
Wilbur et al. [26] | 5/ Mixed method: group focus and semi-structured individual interviews/ Presence of a clinical pharmacist on the team | According to all members of the team making up the rheumatology specialty clinic, the pharmacist’s presence is useful for education regarding the treatments prescribed in rheumatology: role in improving patient understanding and adherence. Medication reconciliation desired by the team members Full-time pharmacist desired |
References | Study Type | EQUATOR Network’s Guideline Used | Proportion of Positive Criteria | Quality Level (GRADE) |
---|---|---|---|---|
Marra et al. [32] | Observational | STROBE | 82% | Moderate |
Hall et al. [30] | Observational | STROBE | 79% | Low |
Zwikker et al. [25] | Observational | STROBE | 68% | Low |
Soubieux et al. [22] | Observational | STROBE | 83% | Moderate |
Yailian et al. [23] | Observational | STROBE | 83% | Moderate |
Ernst et al. [16] | Observational | STROBE | 79% | Low |
Huang et al. [31] | Observational | STROBE | 68% | Low |
Boursier et al. [14] | Observational | STROBE | 63% | Very low |
Peter et al. [34] | Observational | STROBE | 73% | Low |
Issa et al. [36] | Observational | STROBE | 83% | Moderate |
Ernst et al. [28] | Observational | STROBE | 55% | Very low |
Lattard et al. [20] | Observational | STROBE | 77% | Low |
Petry et al. [27] | Observational | STROBE | 84% | Moderate |
Romano et al. [37] | Observational | STROBE | 86% | Moderate |
Mikuls et al. [33] | Randomized | CONSORT | 93% | High |
Goldfien et al. [29] | Randomized | CONSORT | 74% | Moderate |
Petkova et al. [21] | Randomized | CONSORT | 77% | High |
Grech et al. [18] | Randomized | CONSORT | 41% | Low |
Zwikker et al. [24] | Randomized | CONSORT | 92% | High |
Gutermann et al. [19] | Randomized | CONSORT | 88% | High |
Thapa et al. [35] | Randomized | CONSORT | 93% | High |
Hay et al. [17] | Randomized | CONSORT | 88% | High |
Wilbur et al. [26] | Qualitative | SRQR | 81% | Moderate |
Coursier et al. [15] | Cost effectiveness | CHEERS | 61% | Very low |
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Barat, E.; Soubieux, A.; Brevet, P.; Gerard, B.; Vittecoq, O.; Lequerre, T.; Chenailler, C.; Varin, R.; Lattard, C. Impact of the Clinical Pharmacist in Rheumatology Practice: A Systematic Review. Healthcare 2024, 12, 1463. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare12151463
Barat E, Soubieux A, Brevet P, Gerard B, Vittecoq O, Lequerre T, Chenailler C, Varin R, Lattard C. Impact of the Clinical Pharmacist in Rheumatology Practice: A Systematic Review. Healthcare. 2024; 12(15):1463. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare12151463
Chicago/Turabian StyleBarat, Eric, Annaelle Soubieux, Pauline Brevet, Baptiste Gerard, Olivier Vittecoq, Thierry Lequerre, Catherine Chenailler, Rémi Varin, and Claire Lattard. 2024. "Impact of the Clinical Pharmacist in Rheumatology Practice: A Systematic Review" Healthcare 12, no. 15: 1463. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare12151463
APA StyleBarat, E., Soubieux, A., Brevet, P., Gerard, B., Vittecoq, O., Lequerre, T., Chenailler, C., Varin, R., & Lattard, C. (2024). Impact of the Clinical Pharmacist in Rheumatology Practice: A Systematic Review. Healthcare, 12(15), 1463. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare12151463