News

Primary care acne treatment reduces dermatology referrals


 

FROM JAMA DERMATOLOGY

References

If primary care physicians initiated therapy in patients with mild to moderate acne, they could significantly decrease referrals to dermatologists, reduce patient waiting times, and cut health care costs, based on a study published online March 6 in JAMA Dermatology.

The researchers used retrospective data to model two treatment algorithms for initiating acne therapy based on evaluations of 253 dermatology referrals by primary care physicians at a single center. Half of the acne patients had not received any topical or systemic treatment prior to their referral to a dermatologist.

Two treatment algorithms were modeled for initiating acne therapy: In the first, the primary care physicians initiated topical acne treatments; in the second, they initiated topical treatments and systemic antibiotics.

If primary care physicians initiated topical acne therapy, the first algorithm predicted a 48% reduction in initial referrals to dermatologists, a 40% overall reduction in referrals, a mean 28.6-day reduction in delay to treatment, and an associated cost savings of $20.28 per patient.

Following the second algorithm entirely eliminated referrals for 72% of patients, reduced initial referrals by 86.7%, and reduced the mean delay to treatment by 27.9 days; the cost savings was $35.68 per patient, wrote Dr. Kristina J. Liu of the Harvard Combined Dermatology Residency Program and coauthors (JAMA Dermatol. 2016 March 6. doi: 10.1001/jamadermatol.2016.0183).

“Our findings are extracted from and applicable to patients who already have access to primary care clinicians. While patients can be efficiently treated by presenting directly to a dermatologist, in many health plans, a referral from primary care is a requisite step that precludes this possibility. Furthermore, 235 patients (93%) in our cohort were being managed by their primary care clinicians for other health conditions in addition to acne. Given these other health concerns, the patients in our study would likely access their primary care clinicians regardless of the problem of acne. Thus, the judicious use of primary care resources to manage acne as part of the holistic care of the patient can prove to be a time- and cost-saving strategy,” the authors wrote.

In addition, 32% of the referrals in the study were for acne plus another dermatologic issue, and such patients likely require dermatologic evaluation regardless of primary care clinician-driven acne management, the authors added.

One author declared employment with Walgreens Boots Alliance. No other conflicts of interest were declared.

Recommended Reading

Turn down the androgens to treat female pattern hair loss
MDedge ObGyn
Balance caution with necessity when prescribing dermatology drugs in pregnancy
MDedge ObGyn
Head for oral contraceptives to target women’s acne
MDedge ObGyn
Peripartum probiotics linked to lower atopic dermatitis risk in offspring
MDedge ObGyn
Azithromycin and doxycycline effective for urogenital chlamydia*
MDedge ObGyn
New FDA approval for adalimumab: Hidradenitis suppurativa
MDedge ObGyn
Adolescent sexual assault victims not receiving STI testing or prophylaxis
MDedge ObGyn
Answers elusive in quest for better chlamydia treatment
MDedge ObGyn
Resistant gonorrhea rates high in China, raise concerns in U.S.
MDedge ObGyn
Vaccine for treating genital herpes reduced viral shedding at 6 months
MDedge ObGyn