1. Personal, financial and time burden in inherited ichthyoses: A survey of 144 patients in a university-based setting.
- Author
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Klein C, Oji V, Sommer R, Augustin M, Ständer S, Salzmann S, Kiekbusch K, Bodes J, Danzer MF, Traupe H, Fischer J, Steinke S, and Süßmuth K
- Subjects
- Humans, Female, Male, Adult, Young Adult, Adolescent, Middle Aged, Surveys and Questionnaires, Child, Child, Preschool, Pruritus therapy, Pruritus economics, Pruritus etiology, Time Factors, Germany, Aged, Ichthyosis economics, Ichthyosis therapy, Quality of Life, Cost of Illness
- Abstract
Background: Patients with inherited ichthyosis suffer from scaling due to mutations affecting the epidermal barrier. Symptomatic treatment with ointments, bathing and mechanical scale removal can alleviate the disease, but therapy is time and cost intensive., Objectives: We investigated costs, time and disease burden of ichthyoses. The study addresses difficulties of the healthcare situation for patients with ichthyoses and reveals potential improvements., Materials and Methods: We developed a questionnaire addressing time and financial effort for the treatment. Additionally, we collected data of the Dermatology Life Quality Index (DLQI) and the Pruritus Life Quality (5PLQ) questionnaires to determine the impact of ichthyosis and associated pruritus on quality of life (QoL)., Results: We recruited 144 patients with ichthyosis (median age: 23; 53.5% female) from the Department of Dermatology in Muenster (Germany) and the German patient support group including common, rare and syndromic subtypes. Eighty-seven percent reported applying topical therapeutics at least once per day, 66.4% several times with an overall median duration of 15 min. Highest single expenditure of time was due to balneotherapy (n = 115; median bathing time: 40 min). In 81.9%, the health insurance did not completely cover the costs for topical treatment causing additional financial burden to the patient with a median of 71 € per quarter, herein creams being the largest cost factor (50 €). Patients with Netherton syndrome showed the highest median expenditure (170 €). The QoL impairment under treatment was moderate (median DLQI: 8.5 points). Pruritus was prevalent in 79.9% and showed a distinct impact on QoL (median 5PLQ: 7.5 points) without any significant difference between the subtypes (p = 0.37)., Conclusion: Patients suffering from ichthyoses have a large and lifelong overall burden in mild and severe subtypes. Since continuous topical treatment is required, financial and psychosocial support needs to be considered beyond dermatological care., (© 2024 European Academy of Dermatology and Venereology.)
- Published
- 2024
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