Overcoming Barriers to the Effective Management of Severe Asthma in Italy
Pierluigi Paggiaro,1 Simona Barbaglia,2 Stefano Centanni,3,4 Davide Croce,5 Enrico Desideri,6 Saffi Giustini,7,8 Claudio Micheletto,9 Antonino Musarra,10 Nicola Scichilone,11 Ugo Trama,12 Maria Teresa Zedda,7,13 Giorgio Walter Canonica14 1Department of Surgery, Medicine, Molecular Biology, and Critical Care, University of Pisa, Pisa, Italy; 2Associazione Nazionale Pazienti "Respiriamo Insieme", Padova, Italy; 3Department of Health Sciences, Università degli Studi di Milano, Milan, Italy; 4Respiratory Unit, ASST Santi Paolo e Carlo, Milan, Italy; 5Center for Health Economics, Social and Health Care Management, LIUC-Università Cattaneo, Castellanza, Italy; 6Fondazione Innovazione e Sicurezza in Sanità, Rome, Italy; 7Italian General Practitioners' Association "SIMG", Florence, Italy; 8Local Health Unit of Montale, Pistoia, Italy; 9Cardio-Thoracic Department, Respiratory Unit, Integrated University Hospital, Verona, Italy; 10Allergy Unit, National Healthcare System, Reggio Calabria, Italy; 11Biomedical Department of Internal and Specialist Medicine, University of Palermo, Palermo, Italy; 12Dirigente UOD 06 Politica del Farmaco e Dispositivi, Naples, Italy; 13General Practice, Cagliari, Italy; 14Personalized Medicine Asthma & Allergy Clinic, Humanitas University and Research Hospital-IRCCS, Milan, ItalyCorrespondence: Pierluigi PaggiaroDepartment of Surgery, Medicine, Molecular Biology and Critical Care, University of Pisa, Via Paradisa No. 2, Pisa, 56124, ItalyTel +39 050 995365Fax +39 050 580124Email pierluigi.paggiaro@unipi.itIntroduction: People with severe asthma (SA) often have poor disease control and quality of life, and are at high risk of exacerbations, lung function decline and asthma-related death. The present expert opinion article aimed to identify unmet needs in the management of SA in Italy, and propose possible solutions to address these needs.Methods: At five multidisciplinary events in Italy, attendees identified factors that interfered with the effective management of SA and suggested how these barriers could be overcome. A core group of 12 Italian experts (pulmonologists, general practitioners, allergists, payers and patients) identified the main issues and proposed possible solutions based on the results from the meetings and relevant articles from the literature.Results and Conclusions: We reviewed the gap between real-world practice and guidelines, oral corticosteroid overuse, SA-related mortality, and barriers to effective SA treatment. Common themes were lack of awareness about SA among both patients and clinicians, and lack of networking/information exchange between those involved in the treatment of SA. Participants agreed on the need to implement patient education and create multidisciplinary groups of specialists to improve SA management through multidisciplinary educational initiatives, meetings with local experts, development of a flow chart for referral/connection with local experts and specialized centers. Clinical instruments that might help specialists improve SA management included referral networks, integrated care pathways, phenotyping and treatment algorithms, exacerbation tracking, and examination of electronic medical records for patients with uncontrolled asthma. The following actions need to be implemented in Italy: i) maximize the use of advanced therapies, eg, biologics; ii) increase/improve education for physicians and patients; iii) improve multidisciplinary communication and care coordination; iv) introduce regional and local protocols for SA diagnosis and treatment; and v) change the structure of healthcare services to reduce specialist waiting times and facilitate access to biologic therapies.Keywords: biologic therapy, expert opinion, oral corticosteroids, severe asthma, unmet needs