Development of King's College Hospital Breathlessness Service
Breathless Patients With Any Established Underlying Medical Diagnosis
About this trial
This is an interventional health services research trial for Breathless Patients With Any Established Underlying Medical Diagnosis
Eligibility Criteria
Inclusion Criteria:
- Patients with any established underlying medical diagnosis with breathlessness on exertion or at rest.
- Cancer patients who have risk factors for breathlessness( risk factors include a history of smoking, asthma or COPD, lung irradiation, exposure to asbestos, coal dust, cotton dust or grain dust, lung involvement by cancer)
- Respiratory muscle weakness
- Anxiety.
- Patients must have advanced disease that is refractory to maximal optimised medical management. - Patients must be able to engage with a short term physiotherapy and occupational therapy intervention.
Exclusion Criteria:
- Patients with breathlessness of unknown cause.
- Chronic hyperventilation syndrome.
Sites / Locations
- King's College Hospital
Arms of the Study
Arm 1
Arm 2
No Intervention
Experimental
Usual care
Breathlessness Support Service
Best usual practice including general respiratory specialist and primary care
Patients randomised to the intervention group (IG) will be entered into the BSS in addition to standard best usual care. Expertise in the BSS will comprise of a palliative care consultant or specialist registrar (SpR), a respiratory medicine consultant or SpR with a specialist interest in breathlessness, a respiratory physiotherapist, an occupational therapist and a respiratory nurse specialist. Patients will see 12 health professionals per visit, and multidisciplinary team meetings will take place before and after each visit. Outpatient clinics will take place once per week. The timing of interventions and data collection has been designed to allow for short disease trajectories in patients with cancer and minimise patient burden, whilst allowing time for interventions to have the desired effect. Four weeks is considered to be the minimum length of pulmonary rehabilitation programmes that give a clinically significant benefit.