Multiple Symptoms Study 3 – An extended-role general practitioner clinic for patients with persistent physical symptoms: a Randomised Controlled Trial

Christopher Burton*, Cara Mooney, Laura Sutton, David White, Jeremy Dawson, Kate Fryer, Monica Greco, Michelle Horspool, Aileen R. Neilson, Gill Rowlands, Tom Sanders, Ruth E. Thomas, Steve Thomas, Cindy Cooper, Jonathan Woodward, Emily Turton, Waquas Waheed, Pavi Kumar, Katie Ridsdale, Ellen MallenderVincent Deary

*Corresponding author for this work

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Abstract

Background
People with multiple and persistent physical symptoms have impaired quality of life and poor experiences of health care. We aimed to evaluate the effectiveness of a community-based Symptoms Clinic intervention in people with multiple and persistent physical symptoms.

Trial design
Pragmatic multicentre individually randomised parallel group clinical trial.

Methods
Participants: Recruitment was between December 2018 and December 2021 in four areas of the UK. Eligibility was based on electronic health records, healthcare use and multiple physical symptoms (PHQ-15 between 10 and 20) which were not due to other medical conditions. Intervention delivery changed from face to face to online in 2020 in response to the pandemic.

Interventions: Participants were randomised to receive the Symptoms Clinic plus usual care (intervention) or usual care alone (control). The Symptoms Clinic is a short-term extended medical consultation-based intervention delivered over approximately 8 weeks.

Objective: To test the clinical and cost-effectiveness of an extended-role general practitioner ‘Symptoms Clinic’ for people with persistent physical symptoms.

Outcome: The primary outcome measure was the PHQ-15 at 52 weeks post randomisation.

Randomisation: Participants were randomised 1 : 1 using a centralised web-based system, stratified by study centre with random permuted blocks of varying sizes.

Masking: It was not possible to mask participants to their allocation. Outcome assessors who handled patient-reported questionnaires were masked to allocation.

Results
Numbers randomised: 354 participants were randomised into the trial: 176 to the usual care group and 178 to the intervention group.

Numbers analysed: 132 participants in the usual care group and 144 participants in the intervention group were included in the analysis representing 77.8% retention.

Outcome: Mean (SD) PHQ-15 at baseline was 14.9 (3.0) in the control group and 15.0 (2.9) in the intervention group. At 52 weeks it was 14.1 (3.7) in the control group and 12.2 (4.5) in the intervention group. The between-group difference, adjusted for age, sex, baseline PHQ-15 and clinician effect was −1.82 (95% CI −2.67 to −0.97; p < 0.001) favouring the intervention.

Harms: There were no significant between-group differences in the proportions of patients experiencing non-serious (−0.03, 95% CI −0.11 to 0.05) or serious (0.02, 95% CI −0.02 to 0.07) adverse events. All serious adverse events were deemed unrelated to trial interventions.

Economic evaluation: Cost-effectiveness analysis indicated an incremental cost-effectiveness ratio of £15,751/QALY.

Process evaluation: The intervention was delivered with high fidelity and was acceptable to patients. The intervention appeared to act through the hypothesised mechanism of explanation as a bridge from uncertainty about the cause to actions to manage symptoms.

Limitations and further research: The intervention was delivered by a small number of GPs in long consultations. Further research should examine wider implementation and how to integrate elements of the intervention into shorter consultations.

Conclusions
The Symptoms Clinic delivered by specially trained GPs leads to a clinically meaningful improvement in physical symptoms at 52 weeks and is likely to be a cost-effective addition to current care.
Original languageEnglish
Number of pages24
JournalHealth and Social Care Delivery Research
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2 Apr 2025

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