Journal Pre-proof Engaging Patient Partners In State of the Art Allergy Care: Finding Balance When Discussing Risk Marcus Shaker, MD, MSc, Karen Hsu-Blatman, MD, Elissa M Abrams, MD PII:
S1081-1206(20)30075-2
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.anai.2020.01.029
Reference:
ANAI 3151
To appear in:
Annals of Allergy, Asthma and Immunology
Received Date: 7 December 2019 Revised Date:
3 January 2020
Accepted Date: 22 January 2020
Please cite this article as: Shaker M, Hsu-Blatman K, M Abrams E, Engaging Patient Partners In State of the Art Allergy Care: Finding Balance When Discussing Risk, Annals of Allergy, Asthma and Immunology (2020), doi: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.anai.2020.01.029. This is a PDF file of an article that has undergone enhancements after acceptance, such as the addition of a cover page and metadata, and formatting for readability, but it is not yet the definitive version of record. This version will undergo additional copyediting, typesetting and review before it is published in its final form, but we are providing this version to give early visibility of the article. Please note that, during the production process, errors may be discovered which could affect the content, and all legal disclaimers that apply to the journal pertain. © 2020 American College of Allergy, Asthma & Immunology. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
CME Title: Engaging Patient Partners In State of the Art Allergy Care: Finding Balance When Discussing Risk Marcus Shaker, MD, MSc1, 2 Karen Hsu-Blatman, MD, 1,2 Elissa M Abrams, MD3
1
Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center, Section of Allergy and Immunology, Lebanon, NH
2
Geisel School of Medicine at Dartmouth, Hanover, NH
3
Department of Pediatrics and Child Health, Section of Allergy and Immunology, University of Manitoba, Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada Corresponding Author: Marcus Shaker, MD, MSc Associate Professor of Pediatrics; Associate Professor of Community and Family Medicine Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center, Section of Allergy and Immunology Dartmouth Geisel School of Medicine 1 Medical Center Dr. Lebanon, NH 03756 Phone (603) 653-9885 Fax (603) 650-0907
Funding Source: None
Clinical Trials Registration: Not Applicable
Word count: 3,992 (4,000 max)
References: 60 (60 max)
Figures/Tables: 8 (8 max). Figures – 6; Tables - 2
Conflicts of Interest: Marcus Shaker is a member of the Joint Taskforce on Allergy Practice Parameters; has a family member who is CEO of Altrix Medical; serves on the Editorial Board of the Journal of Food Allergy and the Annals of Allergy, Asthma, and Immunology
Karen Hsu-Blatman has served on a scientific advisory board for Biocryst.
Elissa Abrams: is a member of the National Medical Advisory for Food Allergy Canada and received an unrestricted educational grant from Novartis.
Key words: shared decision making; risk; psychology; cost-effectiveness; quality of life; health state utility; disability-adjusted life year; odds; patient decision aid; decisional conflict; decisional self-efficacy; food allergy
Abbreviations: quality-adjusted life years (QALY), disability-adjusted life years (DALY), shared decision making (SDM), decision aids (DA)
19-12-0613R1 abstract Objective: To review risk communication in the context of shared decision making. Data Sources: Articles describing risk communication, shared decision making, and cost-effective healthcare delivery. Study Selections: A narrative review detailing approaches to improve risk communication and shared decision making to optimize patient-centered cost-effective practice. Results: Risk communication must occur on a foundation of mutual trust and can be improved by keeping risk in perspective of everyday hazards such as using pictograms when possible, providing numeric likelihoods of risks and benefits, and discussing absolute risks. Variability in patient-perceived quality of life for allergic and non-allergic health states may impact the health and economic outcomes of many allergy therapies. Shared decision making improves patient knowledge and risk perception, engagement, and adherence. Patient decision aids can be time consuming to develop and validate, but their use is associated with a more accurate understanding of patientoriented outcomes. Conclusion: Communicating risk is complex and validated patient decision aids using visual aids, presenting essential information, using knowledge checks, and incorporating values clarification can reduce decisional conflict and improve decisional self-efficacy.
1 1
2
Introduction
Understanding contextual factors unique to each individual is central to building trust
3
and providing the right care, at the right time, every time. Communicating risk is complex but is
4
critical to high-quality healthcare delivery, because risk perception may be one reason for
5
practice variation, both from the standpoint of the clinician and the patient.1-9 Incorporating
6
shared decision making (SDM) can improve health by improving communication.4,10,11
7
SDM is particularly beneficial for chronic diseases with long-term therapies (such as
8
allergic conditions) because treatment options often involve uncertainty and trade-offs that
9
must be understood from each patient’s perspective.4,11,12 Patient engagement is central to
10
any successful treatment plan.12 The SDM process brings patients more directly into their own
11
care, promotes efficient care delivery, improves patient satisfaction with care received, and
12
may even lower liability costs.10,12,13 SDM invites patients to perform their own risk/benefit
13
analysis on medical information as they perceive and interpret it, in partnership with their
14
trusted physician. Appreciating how individuals perceive and process risks and benefits is a key
15
ingredient to include patients as stakeholders.3,4,11
16
17
18
Risk communication and risk framing
Communicating risk involves trust, health literacy, affect and emotion, and human
19
factors including age, occupation, and life experience.4,11 To be adequate, patients and families
20
must comprehend the information they need to effectively make decisions, and receive trusted
2 21
information at the point of care (Figure 1).4,11 Decisional conflict represents uncertainty when
22
choosing options and can be associated with decisional regret and ineffective decision
23
making.14 Effective decisions are characterized by high understanding of trade-offs, high
24
decisional certainty, and low decisional conflict.14 High fidelity decision making requires two-
25
way and multi-directional communication and engagement with space and time for values
26
clarification in iterative process.11 Medical decisions frequently involve difficult trade-offs,
27
creating vulnerabilities to effects of framing options available to patients.4 In fact, contextual
28
effects of apparently trivial word choices can impact decisions made by patients. 4,15 Gain or
29
loss framing can also have a significant impact on how risks are perceived (i.e., describing
30
chances of experiencing anaphylaxis versus not experiencing anaphylaxis).4 For example, a
31
patient with food allergy may perceive a food allergy fatality risk of 1-2 per million differently
32
than an understanding that there is a 99.9999% chance of not dying from food allergy.7,16
Numeracy is defined as the ability to comprehend what numbers mean, and it is not a
33 34
universal skill. By some estimates, only 85% of adults know which risk is higher: 1%, 5%, or
35
10%.4,17 While objective measures of health numeracy include the Test of Functional Health
36
Literacy (TOFHLA)18 and the Medical Data Interpretation Test19, these are not commonly used
37
in clinical encounters.4 Understanding patient health numeracy is important, because high
38
numeracy individuals may prefer quantitative presentation of risks and benefits, while low
39
numeracy patients may benefit from qualitative presentations including use of stories and
40
comparisons.4 In fact, both quantitative and qualitative expressions of risk have limitations.4,20-
41
22
42
one patient may interpret a 10% risk as low while to another patient a “low” risk may indicate
From a qualitative point of view, “low” and “high” risks may be interpreted differently, as
3 43
an undesirable outcome approximates 1% or less.4,23 Quantitatively, it may difficult for some
44
patients to comprehend what a fatality risk of 1 in 10 million (the risk of food allergy fatality in
45
an unselected population) represents.7,16 In such situations risk anchoring can be helpful when
46
describing rare events. For example, by comparing the unselected food fatality risks to similar
47
probabilities (e.g., the risk to a lightning strike) important perspective can be added (Figure 2).7
48
Keeping risk in context seems intuitive, so much so that the editors of the British Medical
49
Journal compiled a table of everyday risks in 2003 (Table 1).24 However, depending on
50
individual experiences risk anchoring can have variable effectiveness for patients (e.g., a patient
51
experiencing a recent severe bicycle accident may appreciate this risk comparison differently),
52
.25,26 Heuristic bias can be mitigated with graphical formats which can be helpful
53
communicating quantitative and qualitative facts.4 However, choice of graphical presentation
54
can also effect comprehension, particularly in low numeracy patients.4,27 While pie graphs
55
effectively communicate an overall impression of risk, bar graphs most effectively communicate
56
verbatim knowledge. Notably, pictographs effectively communicate both quantitative and
57
qualitative risk (Figure 3).4,27 Presentation of natural frequencies versus percentages may also
58
impact comprehension (e.g., 15% vs 15 out of 100 patients), particularly in low numeracy
59
patients who may see percentages as abstract and therefore attribute a lower level of
60
conceptual risk with them.4,28
61
When discussing options, it is important to balance information provided against
62
cognitive overload.4,29 Patients evaluated in allergy and immunology clinics are complex, and
63
modern treatments present can present a dizzying array of trade-offs.30,31 Still, as much as
64
possible it is important to reduce the amount of information initially provided to the essential
4 65
level, realizing patient context, preference, and educational will further guide the clinical
66
dialouge.4,32,33
67
The number needed to treat (or harm) is a useful concept to providers and is often
68
derived from patient expected event rates and odds ratios produced from systematic reviews
69
and meta-analyses.22,34 However, while intuitive from the provider’s perspective, patients may
70
find this a difficult format to understand,35 because patients are approaching a conversation
71
about treatment options from their unique perspective. Conversely, providers may consider
72
treatments from both an individual patient’s perspective as well as in terms of populations at
73
risk.34,36 Understanding the distinction between relative and absolute risk can be challenging
74
even for clinical faculty, with one recent study suggesting only half of clinical faculty members
75
were highly confident in their understanding of relative and absolute statistical terms.37 The
76
distinction between relative and absolute risk is important, because descriptions in relative
77
terms frequently lead to an increased perception of difference between competing options.20,35
78
In particular, when the absolute risk (or benefit) is very low, simply describing the relative risk
79
can be misleading (Figure 4).21 For example, although a risk difference 0.002% and 0.001% may
80
be quite small, their relative risk the same as the relative difference between 20% and 10%.
81
Appreciating the difference between odds and odds ratios, risk and risk ratios, relative
82
risk reduction, and absolute risk reduction can be challenging for patients and providers
83
alike.21,37,38 Odds and probability are curious mathematical cousins that look nearly identical at
84
low event rates but can become quite disparate as risk increases.38,39 While probability is a
85
measure of the occurrence to the whole, odds is a measure of occurrence to nonoccurrence
5 86
(Figure 5).38,39 Clinicians are usually keen to know probabilities of benefit and adverse events,
87
but many non-clinicians may be more familiar with approaching event occurrence in terms of
88
odds. For example, from a gambling perspective odds provide a useful heuristic for a fair
89
payout. With four suites in a deck of cards, the odds of drawing a card of any particular suite
90
are 1:3. Therefore betting $1 on selecting a club would require a payout of $3 to break even.39
91
Odds ratios (ORs) do have an advantage when considering binary outcomes of occurrence to
92
nonoccurrence, because the OR of the nonoccurrence can be easily calculated as the inverse of
93
the original OR.39 Depending on patient numeracy and experience, understanding probability
94
and odds can be more or less challenging.17,37,39
95
96
97
Trust, Risk Tolerance, and the Psychology of Risk
Trust is the currency of communication when physicians, patients, and their families
98
discuss diagnostic and/or management options.11 The clinician, patient, and family members
99
bring unique perspectives to the process of shared decision making based on individual and
100
common experiences. Mutual trust is foundational to any clinical encounter and cannot be
101
overemphasized, particularly in underserved communities. Interwoven into the clinical
102
conversation are aspects of implicit bias and cultural discordance. Adding complexity is the
103
larger societal perspective of value-based care which can also inform potentially wasteful
104
medical practices which may be cognitively satisfying or psychologically comfortable.5,6,8,9,40-44
105
For example, while advising patients to activate emergency medical services or undergo
6 106
extended clinical observation after resolved anaphylaxis may appear the “safest” management
107
strategy, these universal management approaches are not cost-effective.5,8
108
Life experiences and developmental stages (e.g., adolescence) influence risk
109
tolerance.3,26 Recency bias can influence both patients and clinicians when discussing event
110
rates, with more available memories of anaphylaxis or adverse reactions leading to a greater
111
perception of risk.26 Professional training can also implicitly influence risk perception. Health
112
and safety professionals tend to be more risk averse while financial professionals tend to
113
tolerate greater risks when options are framed in positive (gain) terms.3 These findings
114
highlight a potential bias of clinicians who, motivated by primum non nocere, may assume
115
patients have similar risk preferences. For example, unwarranted practice variation has been
116
documented in the requirement for self-injectable epinephrine in patients receiving allergen
117
immunotherapy (AIT). While universal self-injectable prescriptions are not cost-effective9, in
118
the most recent AAAAI/ACAAI surveillance study, only 15% of practices never prescribed
119
epinephrine autoinjectors for AIT patients while 30% prescribed them > 90% of the time.1
120
While prescribing self-injectable may be consistent with a clinician’s risk preferences and
121
practice style, a process of shared decision making may elicit a different patient perspective –
122
particularly in consideration of high epinephrine autoinjector costs.45-47
123
Geographic variation in risk-tolerance also leads to practice style variation and
124
unwarranted practice variation. For example, although the benefit of early infant peanut
125
introduction is clear, particularly in higher risk infant populations, international variation in
126
screening recommendations continues to exist.42 While patient-preference care may explain
7 127
some degree of variation, a formal decision aid to assist patients and providers in deciding
128
whether or not to screen high risk infants is not yet available.14 Additional instances of allergy
129
practice that illustrate geographic practice variation include home omalizumab administration6
130
and management of eosinophilic esophagitis.48 While the European Commission has approved
131
omalizumab self-administration following uneventful administration of the first 3 doses,
132
supervised administration continues to be universally recommended in the United States,
133
although the cost-effectiveness of this practice has been questioned.6 Strictly on the domestic
134
front, Hung and colleagues reported that provider preferences drive treatment approaches to
135
eosinophilic esophagitis, with topical steroids used in 86% if cases for initial treatment at the
136
University of North Carolina compared with <1% in Greenville (P<0.01), where dietary
137
elimination is favored.48 Variation in medication insurance coverage can also be a factor in
138
practice variation (e.g., there is currently no FDA-approved medication for the treatment of
139
eosinophilic esophagitis).
140
141
142
Life, Death, QALYs, and DALYs
Medical decisions have non-binary outcomes, and patients and clinicians must weigh
143
risks of benefit as well as morbidity.4,12,49,50 Because decision making is complex and patients
144
must choose non-perfect health states associated with variable quality and disability, measures
145
including quality-adjusted life years (QALY) and disability-adjusted life years (DALY) are useful
146
constructs.49,50 QALYs and DALYs are two side of the same coin – QALYs measure benefit (years
147
gained adjusted to perfect health) and DALYs measure burden (years of mortality and morbidity
8 148
averted).49,50 Both QALYs and DALYs are derived using health state utilities from subjective
149
valuation of competing health states (e.g., living with a peanut allergy vs living without a peanut
150
allergy) evaluated under conditions of risk. Health state utilities represent the degree a person
151
is willing to quantitively trade or risk years of their life in order to live without a given condition.
152
Health state utilities are important for understanding health and economic outcomes across
153
medical practice49,51, but variation in patient-reported health state utilities, impact of proxy-
154
reporting, influence of transient utility decrements, and role of alternative treatment
155
presentations requires further study.26,27,50,52 Furthermore, the degree to which standard
156
quality of life instruments such as the EQ-5D reflect real-life patient values across medical
157
practice, in particular in the allergy clinic, is incompletely understood.50,53 A better
158
understanding of how allergy treatments influence patient-reported health state utilities is
159
needed, as evidenced by the significant impact health-state utility improvements may play in
160
the cost-effectiveness of food allergy screening and food immunotherapy (Figure 6).51,53,54
161
Preference reversals present a challenge in shared decision making.52 While utility and
162
prospect theory assume stable behavioral risk preferences49, in reality human decision making
163
may show unexpected variation.49,52 To some degree it is not surprising that patients may have
164
a change of heart when considering significant trade-offs, particularly when taking time to
165
reflect on their options and discussing with family members. Because of this, it is important to
166
allow adequate time and space for patients to reach decisions.55 Variation in how patients value
167
health states requires further study.51,53 For example, recent analyses of peanut
168
immunotherapy suggested treatment may be cost-effective, but value of therapy was highly
9 169
dependent on patient-specific factors including quality of life, anxiety, baseline rate of
170
accidental peanut reactions, and health state utilities.51,53,56
171
A further layer of complexity is added with proxy-decision making of caregivers for their
172
children.2,57 For example, caregiver heuristic judgment process have been shown to contribute
173
to proxy-risk perceptions of asthma exacerbation risk.57 However, proxy reports cannot always
174
be substituted for direct patient experience and may differ in some circumstances.2
175
176
177
Shared decision making can mitigate and standardize risk perception
Shared decision making (SDM) is a process of mutual engagement of clinicians and
178
patients characterized by the multidirectional exchange of best available evidence together
179
with experience, expectations, and preferences to maximize decisional self-efficacy while
180
minimizing decisional conflict and regret.4,12 SDM is a dynamic and iterative process that is
181
most helpful for medical decisions with two or more reasonable options.4
182
SDM is often the missing link in optimizing value in health care, which is surprising
183
because most patients are already researching treatment options online before their first
184
consultation.12 Because patients can obtain information quickly online, it becomes important
185
to have two-way open communication about reliable and accurate sources of medical
186
information.12 While the Institute of Medicine has promoted SDM to improve healthcare
187
quality, defining the essential elements of the shared decision making process can be elusive.12
188
At the most fundamental level SDM individualizes care based on patient needs and
10 189
preferences, providing contextual and adequate knowledge with values clarification to engage
190
and empower patients choose options with minimal decisional uncertainty and regret.4,12,14
191
While not all clinical circumstances warrant a shared decision with patients, it is
192
important to appreciate individual patient values and circumstances when evaluating
193
management options.4 Some patients may prefer to receive a more direct medical
194
recommendation, “doctor, what do you recommend?”, particularly in encounters characterized
195
by a high quotient of mutual trust.4 But even in these instances, an implicit process of values
196
clarification can be incorporated into counseling to tailor care to each patient’s needs.4 In
197
some circumstances, motivational interviewing can be a means to values clarification and
198
reinforcement. At times, the strength of evidence-based practice largely directs medical
199
decisions and shared decision making plays a minor (if any) role.4 There are certainly times
200
where shared decision making is not the most appropriate practice paradigm. Examples
201
include use of antibiotic therapy for bacterial meningitis, bronchodilators and corticosteroids
202
for severe asthma exacerbations, and annual influenza vaccination for patients with asthma.58
203
Although patient autonomy plays a central role in all medical encounters, shared
204
decision making further invites the patient to partner with the clinician when presented with
205
management options which are in equipoise or are dependent on an individual patient’s values.
206
SDM had been described to involve three distinct conversations – “team talk”, “option talk”,
207
and “decision talk.”12 Team talk involves a collaborative discussion between the clinician and
208
the patient to describe choices and clarify goals. It is important to relay central and pertinent
209
clinical details during team talk.12 Option talk focuses on discussing alternatives and
11 210
incorporates principles of risk framing and risk communication.12 Patients benefit from visual
211
descriptions of risk using pictograms, as well as understanding contextual risk and patient
212
stories/vignettes.14,27 When a patient understands choices and alternatives, values clarification
213
and knowledge checks are next steps before working with the patient to reach a decision.4,19,29
214
SDM is an ongoing conversation, and many patients need time to digest and discern what
215
matters most to them before making a decision.12,14 But the process is well worth it. SDM not
216
only improves patient knowledge, but also increases accurate risk perceptions, patient
217
involvement, and adherence while decreasing health care costs and invasive procedures.12
218
Application of shared decision making can improve allergy care, and the examples
219
where it is needed are myriad – from asthma, to urticaria, to drug allergy, and
220
immunodeficiency.12 Signs shared decision making may be appropriate include evidence of
221
geographic practice variation, variation in risk perception or preference, and circumstances of
222
low or preference dependent variable healthcare value.8-10,42,58 There are also many (less
223
obvious) circumstances where shared decision making may also have a significant (and under-
224
appreciated) role.12 Given the geographic variation in infant peanut screening, there is likely a
225
role for SDM in counseling families in the United States, despite current guidance for universal
226
screening of infants with severe eczema or egg allergy.42,54 SDM could also be incorporated
227
into decisions for reflex activation of emergency medical services5 and prolonged hospital
228
observation following resolved anaphylaxis8, discretionary prescription of self-injectable
229
epinephrine with allergen immunotherapy9, and a universal requirement for clinic-observed
230
omalizumab.6 Each of these universal practices has been shown to be potentially low-value.
231
Universal activation of emergency medical services for resolved anaphylaxis costs $1.3 billion
12 232
dollars per life saved5, while prolonged hospital observation of resolved anaphylaxis (to observe
233
a case of biphasic anaphylaxis) could cost $31 million or more per death prevented.8 Similarly,
234
universal self-injectable epinephrine for all patients receiving AIT cost $669 million per quality-
235
adjusted life year.9 Requiring universal omalizumab clinic administration costs $500 million per
236
death prevented, and could actually lead to more fatalities due to automobile clinic-travel
237
fatalities than anaphylaxis fatalities prevented by clinic-administration.6
238
SDM improves healthcare value, and some states have incorporated SDM into
239
statute.13,59 For example, in Massachusetts a certified provider must encourage shared decision
240
making for certain patient-preference sensitive conditions in order to qualify as an accountable
241
care organization.59 SDM can also mitigate liability, as seen in Washington state where statute
242
outlines how providers can document SDM to achieve enhanced liability protection.13 As such,
243
in some settings use of SDM can serve to both communicate risk to the patient while
244
decreasing risk to the provider.
245
246
247
Patient Decision Aids
Decision aids (DAs) are tools to facilitate share decision making and may be paper-based
248
or electronic and may be completed before, during, or after a clinical encounter.14 A key
249
feature is that the decision aid does not replace the clinical encounter, but expands
250
communication and allows an explicit process for patients to understand and digest necessary
251
knowledge.12,14 A great benefit of DAs is that they not only provides timely critical information,
13 252
but also that they allow an explicit process of risk presentation, risk framing, and values
253
clarification.12 DAs have been shown to improve patient knowledge of options and lead to
254
more realistic expectations of outcomes.4 Treatment adherence improves because patients
255
are more engaged in management options that align with their values.4,12
256
It is important for clinicians and developers of decision aids alike to appreciate that
257
these tools are living documents that must be continuously updated with the ever-evolving
258
evidence base.14 Decision aids do not advise patients to pursue a specific course of action but
259
empower them to make the decision that is right for them.12 Use of DAs first requires a
260
foundation of mutual trust – DAs should not be used in a simple didactic “checklist” manner but
261
should be set in the framework of an ever-evolving clinician-provider relationship. DAs can
262
assist the clinician in exploring contextual factors critical to the patient and family in decision
263
making, which are often much less familiar than pathophysiology of disease. Conversely from a
264
patient perspective, the DA can relate important concepts related to disease management. The
265
clinician should consider trust as a potential modifier – either barrier or facilitator, in the
266
collaborative work necessary to optimize management plans.
267
Development of a decision aid begins with a methodologically rigorous process of a
268
decision needs assessment using quantitative patient-specific interviews, instrument
269
development incorporating an iterative expert and stakeholder feedback, and acceptability and
270
validation testing using standardized measures including the Decision Conflict Score (DCS) and
271
Decision Self-Efficacy Score (DSE).14 The DCS has been shown to have discriminant validity for
272
decisional delay and uses 16 questions (Chronbach alpha, 0.78) to report decisional conflict on
14 273
a scale of 0 (very low decisional conflict) to 100 (very high decisional conflict). The DSE
274
correlates with feeling informed and supported, has a Chronbach alpha of 0.92, and is similarly
275
reported on a scale of 0 (very poor decisional self-efficacy) to 100 (very high decisional self-
276
efficacy). Resources for decision aid development are freely available through the International
277
Patient Decision Aids Standards (IPDAS) website.14
278
SDM will be central to decisions about peanut immunotherapy.51,53,56 Evidence
279
suggests that in the short-term peanut oral immunotherapy may cause more reactions than it
280
prevents51,56; however, this risk may be offset by some degree of protection against severe
281
accidental reactions. 51,53 How patients value this trade-off will vary, and the process of
282
transmitting necessary knowledge and promoting values clarification is complex but critical to
283
providing best management.12,14 In the decision whether or not to pursue peanut
284
immunotherapy, patients may also soon have several options to consider – including strict
285
avoidance without immunotherapy, avoidance with oral immunotherapy, or avoidance with
286
epicutaneous immunotherapy.51 A formal decision aid will be helpful in the shared decision
287
making process.53,60 In a recently validated decision aid for commercial peanut
288
immunotherapies, Greenhawt reported high decisional self-efficacy with use of the decision aid
289
(mean DES 91.9, standard deviation (SD), 14.1) and low decisional conflict (mean DCS 20.2, SD
290
19.9). Interestingly, investigators found less decisional conflict among parents of older
291
children.60
292 293
Formal decision aids can streamline the process of SDM “SMART” communication (i.e., Specific, Measurable, Achievable, Realistic, and Time-sensitive).12,14 To date, patient decision
15 294
aids have been developed for AIT, severe asthma, atopic dermatitis12, but additional areas
295
where decision aids could be successfully leveraged include eosinophilic esophagitis
296
management48, food allergy screening and prevention42-44, drug allergy skin testing vs direct
297
oral challenge32,33, and post-anaphylaxis management.5,8 More work is needed to better
298
understand how decision aids can be incorporated into a busy allergy clinic, where they are
299
stored, and how to ensure decision aids are kept up to date.12,14 While many decision aids are
300
available online (Table 2), there is no central repository for patient decision aids.12 SDM can
301
and should play a central role in state of the art allergy care, and how resources will be
302
leveraged to ensure living documents are created and available for use remains an ongoing
303
challenge.12,14 Additional research is also needed to better define how clinicians are using SDM
304
and formal DAs, to evaluate patient specific outcomes associated with use of DAs, and to
305
understand the impact of SDM on clinical productivity and patient quality of life.12,14 Optimizing
306
risk communication and SDM is likely to require several ACTION items, including: (i) leveraging
307
administrative support to align SDM with clinic flow to improve physician engagement; (ii)
308
creating a role for the physician to coordinate SDM while utilizing a collaborative
309
multidisciplinary model to support risk communication, and (iii) encouraging efforts to improve
310
reimbursement for SDM.
311
312
313 314
Conclusion
As we look to a future delivering medical breakthroughs, risk communication will continue to have a central place in the allergy clinic.4,12 While not interchangeable, perception
16 315
and reality are intertwined, and how patients perceive and incorporate risk into medical
316
decisions is complex.4,11 Building trust, appreciating patient and family perspectives vary,
317
acknowledging our own frame of reference, allowing time and space for the medical decision-
318
making process to evolve, and incorporating validated decision aids into patient care will add
319
value and improve the patient experience.3,23,29
320
Shared decision making is both necessary for, and consequential to, patient
321
empowerment. But even with validated decision aids, accurately communicating risk reliably
322
to every patient will be difficult. The perfect is not the enemy of the good, and our challenge
323
will be to stand by what is good and make it better – which in the case of shared decision
324
making will require a commitment to funding, development, validating, maintaining, indexing,
325
updating, and centralizing patient decision aids. While our professional organizations will play
326
a key role in this endeavor, as clinicians our task is to use them to begin the touchstone
327
conversations that will make the difference for today’s patient.
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329
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References
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21. Jiroutek MR, Turner JR. Relative vs absolute risk and odds: Understanding the difference. J Clin Hypertens (Greenwich) 2019;21:859-61. 22. Alonso-Coello P, Carrasco-Labra A, Brignardello-Petersen R, et al. Systematic reviews experience major limitations in reporting absolute effects. J Clin Epidemiol 2016;72:16-26. 23. Honda H, Yamagishi K. Directional verbal probabilities: inconsistencies between preferential judgments and numerical meanings. Exp Psychol 2006;53:161-70. 24. Table of Everyday Risks. (Accessed October 19, 2019, at https://www.bmj.com/content/suppl/2003/09/25/327.7417.694.DC1.) 25. Wundrack R, Prager J, Asselmann E, O'Connell G, Specht J. Does Intraindividual Variability of Personality States Improve Perspective Taking? An Ecological Approach Integrating Personality and Social Cognition. J Intell 2018;6. 26. Richie M, Josephson SA. Quantifying Heuristic Bias: Anchoring, Availability, and Representativeness. Teach Learn Med 2018;30:67-75. 27. Hawley ST, Zikmund-Fisher B, Ubel P, Jancovic A, Lucas T, Fagerlin A. The impact of the format of graphical presentation on health-related knowledge and treatment choices. Patient Educ Couns 2008;73:448-55. 28. Peters E, Hart PS, Fraenkel L. Informing patients: the influence of numeracy, framing, and format of side effect information on risk perceptions. Med Decis Making 2011;31:432-6. 29. Peters E, Dieckmann N, Dixon A, Hibbard JH, Mertz CK. Less is more in presenting quality information to consumers. Med Care Res Rev 2007;64:169-90. 30. Agache I, Akdis CA. Precision medicine and phenotypes, endotypes, genotypes, regiotypes, and theratypes of allergic diseases. J Clin Invest 2019;130:1493-503. 31. Kucuksezer UC, Ozdemir C, Akdis M, Akdis CA. Precision/Personalized Medicine in Allergic Diseases and Asthma. Arch Immunol Ther Exp (Warsz) 2018;66:431-42. 32. Blumenthal KG, Huebner EM, Fu X, et al. Risk-based pathway for outpatient penicillin allergy evaluations. J Allergy Clin Immunol Pract 2019;7:2411-4 e1. 33. Macy E, Vyles D. Who needs penicillin allergy testing? Ann Allergy Asthma Immunol 2018;121:523-9. 34. Shaker MS WD, Golden DBV, Oppenheimer J, Bernstein JA, Campbell RL, Dinakar C, Ellis AK, Greenhawt M, et al. Anaphylaxis - a 2020 practice parameter update, systematic review, and GRADE analysis. Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology 2020. 35. Sheridan SL, Pignone MP, Lewis CL. A randomized comparison of patients' understanding of number needed to treat and other common risk reduction formats. J Gen Intern Med 2003;18:884-92. 36. Guyatt GH, Oxman AD, Vist GE, et al. GRADE: an emerging consensus on rating quality of evidence and strength of recommendations. BMJ 2008;336:924-6. 37. Hazelton L, Allen M, MacLeod T, LeBlanc C, Boudreau M. Assessing Clinical Faculty Understanding of Statistical Terms Used to Measure Treatment Effects and Their Application to Teaching. J Contin Educ Health Prof 2016;36:278-83. 38. Effective Clinical Practice. American College of Physicians. . (Accessed 10/19/19, at http://ecp.acponline.org.) 39. Norton EC, Dowd BE, Maciejewski ML. Odds Ratios-Current Best Practice and Use. JAMA 2018;320:84-5. 40. Shaker MS, Greenhawt MJ. Analysis of Value-Based Costs of Undesignated School Stock Epinephrine Policies for Peanut Anaphylaxis. JAMA Pediatr 2019;173:169-75. 41. Shaker M, Greenhawt M. The Health and Economic Outcomes of Peanut Allergy Management Practices. J Allergy Clin Immunol Pract 2018;6:2073-80.
42. Shaker M, Stukus D, Chan ES, Fleischer DM, Spergel JM, Greenhawt M. "To screen or not to screen": Comparing the health and economic benefits of early peanut introduction strategies in five countries. Allergy 2018;73:1707-14. 43. Shaker M, Verma K, Greenhawt M. The health and economic outcomes of early egg introduction strategies. Allergy 2018;73:2214-23. 44. Shaker M GM. The Health and Economic Benefits of Approaches for Peanut Introduction in Infants with a Peanut Allergic Sibling. Allergy 2019;Accepted for publication. 45. Shaker M GM. Association of Fatality Risk With Value-Based Drug Pricing of Epinephrine Autoinjectors for Children With Peanut Allergy: A Cost-effectiveness Analysis. JAMA Network Open 2018;17:e184728. 46. Shaker M, Bean K, Verdi M. Economic evaluation of epinephrine auto-injectors for peanut allergy. Ann Allergy Asthma Immunol 2017;119:160-3. 47. Rubin R. EpiPen price hike comes under scrutiny. Lancet 2016;388:1266. 48. Huang KZ, Jensen ET, Chen HX, et al. Practice Pattern Variation in Pediatric Eosinophilic Esophagitis in the Carolinas EoE Collaborative: A Research Model in Community and Academic Practices. South Med J 2018;111:328-32. 49. Moffett ML, Suarez-Almazor ME. Prospect theory in the valuation of health. Expert Rev Pharmacoecon Outcomes Res 2005;5:499-505. 50. Augustovski F, Colantonio LD, Galante J, et al. Measuring the Benefits of Healthcare: DALYs and QALYs - Does the Choice of Measure Matter? A Case Study of Two Preventive Interventions. Int J Health Policy Manag 2018;7:120-36. 51. Shaker M, Greenhawt M. Estimation of Health and Economic Benefits of Commercial Peanut Immunotherapy Products: A Cost-effectiveness Analysis. JAMA Netw Open 2019;2:e193242. 52. Kusev P, van Schaik P, Martin R, Hall L, Johansson P. Preference reversals during risk elicitation. J Exp Psychol Gen 2019. 53. Dufresne E, Poder TG, Begin P. The value of oral immunotherapy. Allergy 2019. 54. Greenhawt M, Shaker M. Determining Levers of Cost-effectiveness for Screening Infants at High Risk for Peanut Sensitization Before Early Peanut Introduction. JAMA Netw Open 2019;2:e1918041. 55. Buelow MT, Jungers MK, Chadwick KR. Manipulating the decision making process: Influencing a "gut" reaction. J Clin Exp Neuropsychol 2019;41:1097-113. 56. Shaker MS. An Economic Analysis of a Peanut Oral Immunotherapy Study in Children. J Allergy Clin Immunol Pract 2017;5:1707-16. 57. Shepperd JA, Lipsey NP, Pachur T, Waters EA. Understanding the Cognitive and Affective Mechanisms that Underlie Proxy Risk Perceptions among Caregivers of Asthmatic Children. Med Decis Making 2018;38:562-72. 58. Westert GP, Groenewoud S, Wennberg JE, et al. Medical practice variation: public reporting a first necessary step to spark change. Int J Qual Health Care 2018;30:731-5. 59. The Commonwealth of Massachusetts. Certification as Acountable Care Organization (ACO. (Accessed December 30, 2019, at https://malegislature.gov/Laws/GeneralLaws/PartI/TitleII/Chapter6d/Section15.) 60. Greenhawt M SM, Winders T, Buckstein D, Davis R, Fleischer D, Kim E, Chan E, Stukus D, Matlock D. Development and Acceptability of a Shared Decision-Making Tool for Commercial Peanut Allergy Therapies. Submitted for Publication.
Figure Legends Figure 1. Risk communication should incorporate information patients and families need to effectively make decisions at the point of care. Figure 2. Estimated risks of fatal anaphylaxis. Permission needed. Turner PJ, Jerschow E, Umasunthar T, Lin R, Campbell DE, Boyle RJ. Fatal Anaphylaxis: Mortality Rate and Risk Factors. J Allergy Clin Immunol Pract. 2017;5(5):1169-78.
Figure 3. While pie graphs effectively communicating an overall impression of risk, bar graphs most effectively communicating verbatim knowledge. Notably, pictographs effectively communicating both quantitative and qualitative risk . Adapted from: Fischhoff B. Communicating Risks and Benefits: An Evidence-Based User’s Guide. The Food and Drug Administration (FDA), US Department of Health and Human Services. https://www.fda.gov/media/81597/download. Accessed October 13, 2019. Permission needed. Figure 4. Relative risks may obscure significant differences and the number needed to treat is closely related to absolute risk reduction. Permission Needed: http://ecp.acponline.org/mayjun99/primer.pdf. Accessed 10/19/19; https://ecp.acponline.org/janfeb00/primer.htm. Accessed 10/19/19 Figure 5. When events are infrequent, probability and odds approximate each other but as event rates increase the measures diverge. Permission needed: http://ecp.acponline.org/ecp.primer.2.pdf. Accessed 10/19/19. Figure 6. Peanut allergy health state improvement drives health and economic impact of epicutaneous (a) and oral (b) immunotherapy. Differential health state improvement also impacts the most cost-effective option (c). Most cost-effective therapies are indicated by color at a willingness to pay thresholds of $100,000 per quality-adjusted life-year. Permission needed. Shaker M, Greenhawt M. Estimation of Health and Economic Benefits of Commercial Peanut Immunotherapy Products: A Cost-effectiveness Analysis. JAMA Netw Open. 2019;2(5):e193242.
Table 1. Everyday Risks Some familiar Risks Getting three balls in the UK national lottery Dying on the road over 50 years of driving Transmission of measles Dying of any cause in the next year
The Chance They Will Happen 1 in 11 1 in 85 1 in 100 1 in 100
Annual risk of death from smoking 10 cigarettes per day Getting four balls in the UK national lottery
1 in 200 1 in 206
Needing emergency treatment in the next year after being injured by a can, bottle, or jar
1 in 1,00
Needing emergency treatment in the next year after being injured by a bed mattress or pillow Death by an accident at home Getting five balls in the UK national lottery Death by an accident at work Death playing soccer Death by murder Being hit in your home by a crashing aeroplane Death by rail accident Drowning in the bath in the next year Getting six balls in the UK national lottery Being struck by lightning
1 in 2000 1 in 7100 1 in 11 098 1 in 40 000 1 in 50 000 1 in 100 000 1 in 250 000 1 in 500 000 1 in 685 000 1 in 2 796 763 1 in 10 000 000
Death from new variant Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease Death from a nuclear power accident
1 in 10 000 000 1 in 10 000 000
Table of Everyday Risks. Available from: https://www.bmj.com/content/suppl/2003/09/25/327.7417.694.DC1. Accessed 10/19/19.
Table 2. Shared Decision Making Resources5 Organization Massachusetts General Hospital: Health Decision Sciences Center
Patient Link
Implementation Link
https://mghdecisionsciences.org/too ls-training/ decision-worksheets/
https://mghdecisionsciences.org/ tools-training/
Agency for Health Research and Quality
https://effectivehealthcare.ahrq.gov /search?f%5B0% 5D1⁄4field_product_type%3Adecisio n_aid
Ottawa Hospital Research Institute
https://decisionaid.ohri.ca/
https://www.ahrq.gov/healthliteracy/curriculumtools/shareddecisionmaking/inde x.html https://decisionaid.ohri.ca/imple ment.html
Mayo Clinic Shared Decision Making National Resource Center
https://shareddecisions.mayoclinic.o rg/decision-aidinformation/decision-aids-forchronic-disease/
https://shareddecisions.mayoclin ic.org/resources/sharing-withothers/
Healthwise
https://www.healthwise.net/ohridec isionaid/
https://www.healthwise.org/shar eddecisionmaking.aspx
https://acaai.org/resources/interacti ve-tools
https://college.acaai.org/practice -management-center
https://www.dartmouthhitchcock.org/supportiveservices/decision_making_help.html
https://med.dartmouthhitchcock.org/csdm_toolkits.html
The American College of Allergy, Asthma, and Immunology DartmouthHitchcock Medical Center: Center for Shared Decision Making
Figure 1. Risk Communication and Framing4 • • • • • • • •
Provide numeric likelihoods of risks and benefits Provide absolute risks, not just relative risks Keep denominators consistent Keep time frames constant Use pictograms and other visual aids when possible Reduce superfluous information (cognitive overload) Provide positive and negative frames Keep risk in perspective of everyday hazards
Figure 2. Annual incidence of fatal anaphylaxis in an unselected population
Figure 3. Graphical presentations of Risk
Figure 4. Absolute vs Relative Risk Reduction and Number Needed to Treat
Figure 5. Probability and Odds
Figure 6. Health State Utility Impact on Peanut Immunotherapies
CME LEARNING OBJECTIVES AND QUESTIONS
CME article: Engaging Patient Partners To Provide State of the Art Allergy Care: Finding Balance When Discussing Risk
Learning Objectives: At the conclusion of this activity, participants should be able to:
1. Define shared decision making and barriers to implementation. 2. Discuss strategies to improve risk communication including keeping risk in perspective of everyday hazards and use of pictograms, numeric likelihoods, and exchange of essential information.
19-12-0613R1
Q1. Benefits of shared decision making include a. the ability to remove patient-specific contextual factors from clinical discussions. b. a more efficient clinic flow by use of decision aids in place of individual patient counseling. c. universal provider familiarity with shared decision making. d. improved patient engagement and possible liability protection. e. recency bias.
Q1 ANS: d. improved patient engagement and possible liability protection
Rationale:
The shared decision making process brings patients more directly into their own care, promotes efficient care delivery, improves patient satisfaction with care received, and may even lower liability costs. References: 1. Blaiss MS, Steven GC, Bender B, Bukstein DA, Meltzer EO, Winders T. Shared decision making for the allergist. Ann Allergy Asthma Immunol 2019;122:463-70. 2. Washington State Legislature. Consent form - Consents - Prima facie evidence - Shared decision making - Patient decision aid - Failure to use. (Accessed December 30, 2019, at https://app.leg.wa.gov/rcw/default.aspx?cite=7.70.060.)
Q2. Strategies to improve risk communication include: a. providing numeric likelihoods of risks and benefits. b. varying time frames of options discussed. c. providing an optimistic description of risk with positive framing. d. discussing relative risks while avoiding absolute numbers. e. providing forest plots with odds ratios as part of patient educational handouts.
Q2 ANS: a. providing numeric likelihoods of risks and benefits
Rationale: When discussion options, it is important to balance information provided against cognitive overload. Both quantitative and qualitative expressions of risk have limitations. From a qualitative point of view, “low” and “high” risks may be interpreted differently, so providing numeric likelihoods of risks and benefits is helpful. Understanding the meaning of odds ratios and the distinction between relative and absolute risk can be challenging for patients.
References: 1. Fischhoff B. Communicating Risks and Benefits: An Evidence-Based User’s Guide. The Food and Drug Administration (FDA), US Department of Health and Human Services. https://www.fda.gov/media/81597/download. Accessed October 13, 2019. 2. Lipkus IM, Samsa G, Rimer BK. General performance on a numeracy scale among highly educated samples. Med Decis Making 2001;21:37-44. 3. Jiroutek MR, Turner JR. Relative vs absolute risk and odds: Understanding the difference. J Clin Hypertens (Greenwich) 2019;21:859-61.
19-12-0613R1
Q3. When considering risk a. patients tend to be more risk-averse than clinicians. b. at high event rates, odds and probability converge. c. management of risk demonstrates significant geographic variation d. parent preferences always match those of children. e. clinicians should aim to communicate as much information as possible, so patients are fully informed.
Q3 ANS: c. management of risk demonstrates significant geographic variation
Rationale: When discussion options, it is important to balance information provided against cognitive overload. Odds and probability look nearly identical at low event rates but can become quite disparate as risk increases. Geographic variation in risk-tolerance leads to practice style variation and unwarranted practice variation.
References: 1. Fischhoff B. Communicating Risks and Benefits: An Evidence-Based User’s Guide. The Food and Drug Administration (FDA), US Department of Health and Human Services. https://www.fda.gov/media/81597/download. Accessed October 13, 2019. 2. Peters E, Dieckmann N, Dixon A, Hibbard JH, Mertz CK. Less is more in presenting quality information to consumers. Med Care Res Rev 2007;64:169-90. 3. Norton EC, Dowd BE, Maciejewski ML. Odds Ratios-Current Best Practice and Use. JAMA 2018;320:84-5.
4. Q4. Health state utilities a. are patient based satisfaction scores used to assess effectiveness of patient decision aids. b. can be used to risk-stratify patients who may benefit most from shared decision making. c. are generally uniform across disease states and populations. d. are economically quantifiable measures of quality of life (QoL) that are used to derive quality-adjusted life years. e. can be substituted for point of service decision aids.
Q4 ANS: d. are economically quantifiable measures of quality of life (QoL) that are used to derive quality-adjusted life years.
Rationale: Medical decisions have non-binary outcomes, and patients weigh risks of benefit as well as morbidity Because decision making is complex and patients must choose non-perfect health states associated with variable quality and disability, measures including quality-adjusted life years (QALY) and disabilityadjusted life years (DALY) and useful constructs. Health state utilities represent the degree a person is willing to quantitively trade or risk years of their life in order to live without a given condition.
References:
1. Moffett ML, Suarez-Almazor ME. Prospect theory in the valuation of health. Expert Rev Pharmacoecon Outcomes Res 2005;5:499-505.
2. Augustovski F, Colantonio LD, Galante J, et al. Measuring the Benefits of Healthcare: DALYs and QALYs - Does the Choice of Measure Matter? A Case Study of Two Preventive Interventions. Int J Health Policy Manag 2018;7:120-36.
19-12-0613R1
Q5. Shared decision making a.
is not necessary when patient decision aids are available.
b.
Is necessary in every clinical encounter.
c.
is a mutual engagement of clinicians and patients characterized by the multidirectional exchange of best available evidence together with experience, expectations, and preferences to maximize decisional self-efficacy while minimizing decisional conflict and regret.
d.
involves clinical direction of families to choose one option over another.
e.
can be considered completed when a patient signs an informed consent.
Q5 ANS: c. is a mutual engagement of clinicians and patients characterized by the multidirectional exchange of best available evidence together with experience, expectations, and preferences to maximize decisional self-efficacy while minimizing decisional conflict and regret.
Rationale: Shared decision making individualizes care based on patient needs and preferences, providing contextual and adequate knowledge with values clarification to engage and empower patients choose options with minimal decisional uncertainty and regret. While not all clinical circumstances warrant a shared decision with patients, it is important to appreciate individual patient values and circumstances when evaluating management options. Decision aids are tools to facilitate shared decision making. A key feature is that the decision aid does not replace the clinical encounter, but expands communication and allows an explicit process for patients to understand and digest necessary knowledge
References: 1. Blaiss MS, Steven GC, Bender B, Bukstein DA, Meltzer EO, Winders T. Shared decision making for the allergist. Ann Allergy Asthma Immunol 2019;122:463-70.
2. Fischhoff B. Communicating Risks and Benefits: An Evidence-Based User’s Guide. The Food and Drug Administration (FDA), US Department of Health and Human Services. https://www.fda.gov/media/81597/download. Accessed October 13, 2019. 3.
Patient Decision Aids. The Ottawa Hospital Research Institute. (Accessed October 13, 2019, at https://decisionaid.ohri.ca.)