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King's College London (KCL) researchers discovered that heroin overdose is a common and accidental occurrence which is usually witnessed. Risk of fatal overdose on prison release is exceptionally high with 1 in 200 dying of an overdose within four weeks. KCL researchers proposed and tested the acceptability of prior provision of take-home emergency supplies of the heroin antidote naloxone. KCL research created the stimulus for a national training project for families and carers to administer naloxone and as a result, lives are now being saved. KCL research had a substantial impact on national and international policy and service delivery with take-home naloxone programs introduced around the world. KCL researchers lead the first trial to assess the effectiveness of naloxone for prisoners on release.
While effective treatments for heroin addiction exist, 10% of individuals are non-responsive to treatment and suffer major health and social consequences. Although small, this severe group incur the highest cost to society. Supervised Injectable Opioid Treatment (IOT) involves administration of injectable diamorphine (pharmaceutical heroin) in supervised clinics. Research by King's College London (KCL) demonstrated that IOT is a clinically effective and cost-effective treatment of chronic heroin addiction that has previously appeared untreatable. KCL research has had a significant impact on drugs policy in the UK by providing high-quality evidence, pivotal in the Department of Health identifying IOT as a necessary second-line treatment and in their decision to expand provision of the treatment to an increasing number of clinics.
The use of a formulary to influence prescribing practice is common, with almost all hospitals possessing one that attempts to provide advice on the safe, effective and economic use of medicines. The Maudsley Prescribing Guidelines to Psychiatry steps beyond the function of a mere formulary and provides evidence-based guidance on the use of psychotropic medicines that influences prescribing on both a national and international basis. Now in its 11th Edition and translated into nine languages, much of the evidence in The Guidelines is generated by King's College London research. Additionally, this research is used in other guidelines, in clinical handbooks and in prescribing practices around the world.
King's College London (KCL) research has transformed how people's preferences are respected, supported and achieved at the end of their lives. It has driven policy for end-of-life care in the UK, Europe and Australia, with a cascading impact on clinical practice and training. Our research has helped to reduce institutionalisation at the time of death despite an ageing population. These tremendous economic, sociological and psychological impacts were based on an integrated KCL research programme that identified dying at home as an important and often unmet preference, highlighted barriers that must be overcome, and aids that could help people at the end of life to achieve their preferred place of care and death.
King's College London (KCL) researchers contributed to the discovery that increased C fibre nerve activity in the bladder is a major cause of overactive bladder (OAB) syndrome. Based on this insight, KCL researcher Professor Dasgupta, a surgical urologist at Guy's Hospital, and his team pioneered a new surgical technique for micro-injecting Botulinum Toxin-A (BTX-A) directly into the bladder to suppress C fibres and improve bladder control. The KCL team then conducted the world's first successful clinical trials into the minimally invasive injection of BTX-A n OAB patients. These trials received significant international media coverage. This cost-effective OAB therapy is now licensed by the EU and FDA, is recommended in national and international guidelines, and has significantly improved the treatment of a common health problem.
King's College London (KCL) researchers developed cognitive behaviour therapy for psychosis (CBTp), which is now a National Institute for Health and Care Excellence-recommended psychological intervention. CBTp is now part of routine NHS treatment and an estimated 25,000 patients in England and Wales receive it annually. Implementation of CBTp has been steered by KCL researchers' involvement with the Government's Increasing Access to Psychological Therapies — Severe Mental Illness initiative. The KCL model for CBTp has been used to develop clinics in Australia and the US and information on this therapy is disseminated via a KCL-led website.
Researchers at King's College London (KCL) have established new surgical interventions, including coronectomy, to prevent nerve injuries resulting from wisdom teeth extraction, the most common surgery on the NHS and worldwide. These interventions have been adopted worldwide, for instance coronectomy is now a billable procedure in the US, and are also incorporated into a number of guidelines, for example those by the Royal College of Surgeons and the British Dental association. The KCL team have developed a website aimed at providing information for those with trigeminal nerve injuries, which they can gain both through online content and by directly emailing the specialist team.
King's College London researchers have had a major widespread impact on medical care for people with dementia. They have demonstrated the limited benefit and considerable harm done by the use of antipsychotics in dementia patients. Their follow-on campaigning and policy work brought this major health issue to the forefront of the political agenda and led them to work with the Department of Health to create a best practice guide, now widely used nationally and internationally. In addition, they have worked with the BMJ to develop an e- learning package for General Practitioners. The combined impact of this work has made a major contribution to a 60% reduction in the use of antipsychotic drugs in people with dementia in the UK and major changes in practice internationally, preventing 1000's of unnecessary deaths.
King's College London (KCL) researchers were the first to identify that an early sign of diabetic kidney disease was the presence of albumin in the urine, a condition known as albuminuria. Building on this finding, the KCL Unit of Metabolic Medicine designed and led in-house, national then international randomised controlled clinical trials with the aim of preserving kidney function in diabetic patients. Ultimately, KCL research established that several drug inhibitors of the renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system (RAAS) can control albuminuria, slow the deterioration of kidney function and significantly extend survival rates in diabetic patients. These drugs are now generically available, and their prescription is recommended by current international clinical guidelines across North America, Europe, Australia and Asia. This shows major impact in terms of reach and significance.
Pre-eclampsia is a major contributor to death and disability in pregnancy. Diagnosis, based on accurate blood pressure (BP)/proteinuria determination, is limited by measurement errors and being late features of the disease. In collaboration with industry, King's College London (KCL) researchers have developed an inexpensive, accurate, simple BP device suitable for rural clinics. This device allows intervention to reduce mortality/morbidity and is currently being rolled out in a Gates Foundation project in Africa and Asia. KCL researchers have also helped the company Alere Inc. with the development of a diagnostically accurate test of placental growth factor (PlGF) in women with suspected pre-eclampsia: Alere Triage®PlGF. This demonstrates high sensitivity, superior to current tests, and following commercialisation is being adopted internationally. Their work is additionally reflected in guidelines of international standards for BP device accuracy.