Background: Care for people with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) has altered at King’s College Hospital over the last 20 years. The clinic has been a multidisciplinary, specialist, tertiary referral centre since 1995 with a large team with integrated palliative and respiratory care since 2006. We hypothesised that these changes would improve survival. Methods: In this retrospective observational study, patients diagnosed with El Escorial definite, probable and possible ALS between 1995–1998 and 2008–2011 were followed up. The primary outcome measure was a chi-square test for the proportion of each cohort surviving. Kaplan-Meier survival analysis and Cox multivariate regression were secondary analyses. Results: There was low reporting of some interventions. Five hundred and forty-seven people were included. Survival between the cohorts was significantly different (p = 0.022) with a higher proportion surviving during 2008–2011. Survival time was 21.6 (95% CI 19.2–24.0) months in the 2008–2011 cohort compared to 19.2 years (15.6–21.6) in the 1995–1998 cohort (log rank p = 0.018). Four hundred and ninety-three cases were included in the Cox regression. Diagnostic cohort was a significant predictor variable (HR 0.79 (0.64–0.97) p = 0.023). Conclusions: These results support the hypothesis that integrated specialist clinics with multidisciplinary input improve survival in ALS.
CITATION STYLE
Martin, S., Trevor-Jones, E., Khan, S., Shaw, K., Marchment, D., Kulka, A., … Al-Chalabi, A. (2017). The benefit of evolving multidisciplinary care in ALS: a diagnostic cohort survival comparison. Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis and Frontotemporal Degeneration, 18(7–8), 569–575. https://doi.org/10.1080/21678421.2017.1349151
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