1. The burden of systemic juvenile idiopathic arthritis for patients and caregivers: an international survey and retrospective chart review.
- Author
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Shenoi S, Horneff G, Cidon M, Ramanan AV, Kimura Y, Quartier P, Foeldvari I, Zeft A, Lomax KG, Gregson J, Abma T, Campbell-Hill S, Weiss J, Patel D, Marinsek N, and Wulffraat N
- Subjects
- Absenteeism, Antirheumatic Agents adverse effects, Antirheumatic Agents economics, Arthritis, Juvenile economics, Arthritis, Juvenile epidemiology, Arthritis, Juvenile psychology, Biological Products adverse effects, Biological Products economics, Child, Cross-Sectional Studies, Drug Costs, Efficiency, Employment economics, Europe epidemiology, Female, Health Expenditures, Health Surveys, Humans, Male, Presenteeism economics, Remission Induction, Retrospective Studies, Treatment Outcome, United States epidemiology, Antirheumatic Agents therapeutic use, Arthritis, Juvenile drug therapy, Biological Products therapeutic use, Caregivers psychology, Cost of Illness, Quality of Life
- Abstract
Objectives: To investigate the burden of systemic juvenile idiopathic arthritis (SJIA) on health-related quality of life (HRQOL) and resource use of patients and caregivers (families) on biologic therapy., Methods: This international study assessed SJIA burden in patients on biologics, using a caregiver questionnaire and retrospective chart review. Validated measures included: Child Health Questionnaire Parent-Form 50 (CHQ-PF50), 36-Item Short-Form Health Survey (SF-36v2) and Work Productivity and Activity Impairment questionnaire: Specific Health Problem (WPAI:SHP). Caregivers completed function, treatment satisfaction and resource utilisation questions., Results: Sixty-one biologic treated patients participated (12 anakinra, 25 canakinumab, 24 tocilizumab). Mean age at diagnosis and survey completion was 6.4 and 11.3 years, respectively. Mean (±SD: standard deviation) CHQ-PF50 physical (PhS) and psychosocial (PsS) summary scores were significantly lower in SJIA patients than a normative population (PhS: 40.0±18.2 vs. 53.0±8.8; PsS: 46.6±11.3 vs. 51.2±9.1) as was caregivers' mean SF-36v2 mental component score (MCS; 46.2±10.7 vs. 50.0±10). Assistive devices were required by 54%; 20% required home/car alterations. According to caregivers, biologic treatment completely improved SJIA symptoms in 48% on canakinumab or tocilizumab and 32% on anakinra. Over 2 months, patients missed 2.9 school days due to SJIA (10% yearly loss). Caregivers lost 25 work days annually and 27.5 days of productivity (WPAI-SHP: mean absenteeism 10%; presenteeism 11%). Yearly SJIA travel/treatment costs averaged $1,130., Conclusions: SJIA patients on biologic therapy experience HRQOL impairment, caregivers' mental well-being suffers and productivity losses and expenses are incurred. Therapeutic interventions that reduce the burden of SJIA are required.
- Published
- 2018