Rationale and aims: The reason why many patients seem to tolerate suffering from sub-optimal treated asthma remains unclear. The aim was to evaluate the guideline adherence combined with quality of life of patients with moderate to severe asthma.
Methods: 256 asthma patients from 43 primary care practices in Saxony-Anhalt filled in a questionnaire including the Asthma Quality of Life Questionnaire (AQLQ), the Patient Health Questionnaire (PHQ-D) and questions evaluating the asthma severity, medication and self-management.
Results: 43.4% suffered from moderate to severe asthma. Drug treatment accorded with guidelines in 36.9%, drug dosage of inhaled steroids was too low in 34.3%, and 21.5% were not treated according to guidelines. A total of 7.3% of the patients received end-of-dose therapy. AQLQ declined and depression rose with asthma severity and guideline non-adherence (P < 0.001). Only 29.1% received asthma education. However, 64.5% of the patients without education did not want to receive education. They had a higher quality of life, lower depression (P < 0.001) and lower use of steroids (P = 0.016). Higher depression scores where related with hospital admission (OR 3.29; 95% CI 1.57-6.87 for each quartile of PHQ-D) and unscheduled home visits or ambulatory care (OR 1.58; 1.07-2.33).
Conclusion: There is a large variation of asthma severity which can partly be explained by the guideline adherence of medication and deficits of patients' management. The perceived burden of illness plays a more important role for education and self-management than the real severity of disease. Therefore, target-oriented interventions are needed to identify and motivate patients at risk.