The RIGHT project (Research Into Global Healthcare Tools, http://www.right.org.uk/) is a collaborative project involving five British universities, funded by the UK's Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council. Phase 1 of the project is due to be completed in October 2009, and this paper describes one strand of the research, namely identifying some of the issues with involving stakeholders in simulation modeling in healthcare. Not the least of these is actually identifying who the stakeholders are! Other problems identified are equally tricky, as they involve deeply rooted cultural and behavioral attitudes as well as complex organizational relationships. One of the underlying aims of the next phase of RIGHT is to tackle these problems and to develop a methodology for more effective stakeholder engagement with simulation modeling.
We report the results of a randomized controlled multicentre study on interferon-gamma (IFN-gamma) treatment of systemic sclerosis as determined by skin sclerosis, renal and other organ involvement, global assessment, subjective symptoms and quality of life. Forty-four patients were enrolled into the trial, 27 in the treatment group and 17 in the control group. All patients presented with type I or type II scleroderma. Twenty-nine patients (64%) finished the study. The mean duration of Raynaud's phenomenon and skin sclerosis was 15.3 and 10.8 years, respectively. The skin scores tended to improve in the treatment group (P > 0.05). Mouth aperture increased significantly from 38.5 to 47.7 mm in the treatment group (P < 0.001). Subanalysis of IFN-gamma treated patients with normalized skin sclerosis scores >/=1 showed significant improvement in both skin involvement and subjective symptoms (P < 0.05). Organ involvement improved in eight of 18 treatment patients and in three of 11 control patients. It worsened in three of 18 treatment patients and in four of 11 control patients. One control patient died due to cardiorespiratory failure during the study. No deterioration of renal function occurred during IFN-gamma treatment. There was a significant improvement in quality of life parameters in the control group but not in the treatment group. Plasma levels of neopterin increased significantly during IFN-gamma treatment but not in the control group, whereas N-terminal procollagen III peptide levels did not change in either group. There was a high frequency of mild to moderate influenza-like adverse events during IFN-gamma treatment. Only four of nine drop-out patients, however, experienced symptoms most probably associated with IFN-gamma treatment. We conclude that IFN-gamma therapy has mild beneficial effects on skin sclerosis and disease-associated symptoms in type I and II scleroderma. IFN-gamma treatment was associated with acceptable tolerability and did not induce major renal dysfunction in our patients.
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