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Report To: Area Prescribing Committee Date: Reporting Officer: Helen Stubbs Contact Officer: Subject Helen Stubbs Application of revised RAG criteria to existing Shared Care Agreements Introduction The revised RAG criteria were approved by the APC in January 2015 and the Shared Care Group have subsequently applied the criteria specifically for shared care to the following existing shared care agreements: Apomorphine Atypical antipsychotics ADHD for children ADHD for adolescents and adults Cholinesterase inhibitors for Dementia Disease Modifying Anti-rheumatic Drugs Disease Modifying Drugs for non-rheumatological conditions GnRH analogues Lithium Low molecular weight heparins Application of the RAG criteria The Shared Care Subgroup members applied the criteria in a consistent and logical manner to generate a minimum category rating.An important consideration was that the criteria were applied to the drug and not the condition and as a result, some drugs/drug groups no longer satisfy the required criteria for Shared Care. The attached table is a summary of the application of the revised criteria. All of those drugs which no longer satisfied the Shared Care criteria fell into one of the revised Amber categories. It is important to consider that the revised RAG criteria represent guidance for the majority of patients on a specific drug. However, even if a drug is rated at a particular category, the patient may not be suitable for treatment at that minimum level and so different arrangements may need to be put into place on an individual basis. The summary of the categories is described in Appendix 1. Summary Review of Current Pan-Mersey Shared Care Documents Drug Apomorphine Current category Shared Care Suggested category Amber patient retained Explanation The dose of apomorphine is likely to require frequent re-titration to maximise benefit from the treatment as the condition worsens over time. The patient will not be discharged whilst receiving this treatment Southport & Formby and South Sefton CCGs agreed with this decision Atypical Antipsychotics Shared Care Amber Initiated This status allows for very settled patients to be discharged where the specialist considers it is appropriate and the GP is in agreement. It is anticipated the request to prescribe will precede, and inform, any request to discharge. Secondary care mental health services are designed to respond to primary care referrals in a timely manner should there be a need. Monitoring requirements do not fulfil the new Pan-Mersey criteria for Purple shared care (SC3) The Sefton CCGs support the move from Shared Care to Amber but suggest that Amber patient Retained is more appropriate, given that the patient would need an annual review to ensure the appropriate management of the drug in response to any changes in the patient’s condition. Cholinesterase inhibitors for Dementia Shared Care Amber Initiated This status allows for very settled patients to be discharged where the specialist considers it is appropriate and the GP is in agreement. It is anticipated the request to prescribe will precede, and inform, any request to discharge. Secondary care mental health services are designed to respond to primary care referrals in a timely manner should there be a need. The need for specialist input in dementia is no different to many other long term chronic conditions e.g. heart failure; where the drugs are RAG rated amber initiated or green. To do so would be discriminatory and it is important to maintain parity of care between physical and mental health conditions No monitoring of the drugs are required in primary care. The Sefton CCGs support the move from Shared Care to Amber but suggest that Amber patient Retained is more appropriate, as there is a need to manage the inter-relationship between the deteriorating condition and assessment of ongoing drug efficacy. (Drug dose changes are commonly managed in primary care where the shared care agreement is in place and Sefton GPs have been willing to work with Mersey Care to support the management of patients in the community) ADHD in Children Shared Care Purple (shared care) BP and pulse rate, height and weight should be monitored at least every 6 months and can be undertaken in primary care Southport & Formby and South Sefton CCGs agreed with this decision ADHD in Adults Shared Care Purple (shared care) BP and pulse rate and should be monitored at least every 6 months and can be undertaken in primary care. Southport & Formby and South Sefton CCGs agreed with this decision Lithium Shared Care Purple (shared care) Lithium monitoring required minimum every 3 months, LFTs every 6 months. This can be undertaken in primary care. Southport & Formby and South Sefton CCGs agreed with this decision Disease Modifying Antirheumatic Drugs Shared Care Purple (shared care) Disease Modifying Drugs for non-rheumatological conditions Shared Care Purple (shared care) GnRH analogues eg triptorelin Shared Care Amber patient retained Low Molecular Weight Heparins Shared Care Amber Initiated Regular multiple biochemical monitoring is required 3monthly minimum which can be undertaken in primary care Southport & Formby and South Sefton CCGs agreed with this decision Regular multiple biochemical monitoring is required 3monthly minimum which can be undertaken in primary care Southport & Formby and South Sefton CCGs agreed with this decision The biochemical testing is currently carried out in the hospital setting, not in primary care (as stated in the current shared care documentation). If this situation remains in place then the Amber patient retained category would be more appropriate. Prescribing in primary care would be supported by a Prescribing Support Document which could be approved by the APC Southport & Formby and South Sefton CCGs agreed with this decision SPCs are non-specific about monitoring requirements and monitoring is not indicated for most indications. Regular monitoring is only required for patients at high risk of hyperkalaemia. If a change in status is agreed, prescribing in primary care would be supported by prescribing support information at the time of the request. Southport & Formby and South Sefton CCGs both felt that due to the monitoring arrangements currently included in the Shared Care Agreement, this group of drugs should remain as Shared care eg dose adjustments in relation to weight changes. However, clarification of the monitoring requirements for the various indications should be sought from local haematologists to inform the decision. Appendix 1 Amber Definition These medicines are considered suitable for primary care prescribing following varied levels of specialist input as described below: Amber Recommended requires specialist assessment and recommendation to GP to prescribe in Primary Care Amber Initiated requires specialist initiation of prescribing. Prescribing to be continued by the specialist until stabilisation of the dose and the patient’s condition is achieved and the patient has been reviewed. Amber Patient Retained requires specialist initiation of prescribing. Prescribing to be continued by specialist until stabilisation of the dose and the patient’s condition is achieved and the patient had been reviewed. Patient remains under the care of specialist (ie not discharged) as occasional specialist input may be required. Amber recommended medicines must meet criteria A1 and A2: A1 Requires specialist assessment to enable patient selection A2 Medicine is suitable for on -going prescribing in Primary Care. Amber Initiated medicines must also meet criterion A3. A3 Requires short to medium term specialist prescribing and monitoring of efficacy or toxicity until the patient’s dose and condition is stable Amber Patient Retained medicines must meet criteria A1, A2 and A3 and must also meet criterion A4 A4 May require occasional specialist input indefinitely and therefore the patient should not be discharged from specialist care. Prescribing support information will be available as required. Purple Shared Care Definition Medicines are considered suitable for Primary Care prescribing and/or management, following specialist initiation of therapy, with on-going communication between the Primary Care prescriber and specialist, within the framework of a Shared Care Agreement. Medicines designated as requiring Shared Care require on-going input from both Specialist and Primary Care clinicians and patients should not be discharged from Specialist care. Where prescribing and monitoring are required under shared care, it is implicit that the responsibility for both of these tasks rests with the prescriber. A Shared Care Agreement will always be available for Shared Care medicines and this document will include a Shared Care Agreement pro-forma which will be completed by all involved clinicians. This pro-forma will record agreement to take on defined aspects of care e.g. monitoring and/or on-going prescribing for the individual patients. A policy detailing clinician responsibilities in Shared Care Agreements can be found in Appendix 1 of this document. This policy must be referred to in all cases of Shared Care. All drugs to be included in this category must meet Shared Care criteria 1 to 3 SC1 Requires specialist assessment to enable patient selection and also initiation, stabilisation and review of treatment and the patient`s condition. SC2 Prescribing and/or management of the drug in Primary Care with specialist support and input, within the framework of the Shared Care Agreement is safe and convenient and that there is an appropriate mechanism for individual patient access in Primary Care. SC3 Requires specific long-term monitoring (blood test or other measurement) for adverse effects and / or efficacy of the drug to be completed in Primary Care, and requires on-going specialist support for the dose changes or management of adverse effects. Monitoring is required on a regular basis (typically four times a year). Implicit in any shared care agreement is the understanding that participation is at the discretion of the Primary Care prescriber subject to their clinical confidence.