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What is the impact of giant cell arteritis on patients' lives? A UK qualitative study

Authors :
Sarah L. Mackie
Jane C Richardson
Toby Helliwell
James A. Prior
Jennifer Liddle
Christian D Mallen
Roisin Bartlam
Source :
BMJ Open
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

ObjectivesClinical management of giant cell arteritis (GCA) involves balancing the risks and burdens arising from the disease with those arising from treatment, but there is little research on the nature of those burdens. We aimed to explore the impact of giant cell arteritis (GCA) and its treatment on patients’ lives.MethodsUK patients with GCA participated in semi-structured telephone interviews. Inductive thematic analysis was employed.Results24 participants were recruited (age: 65–92 years, time since diagnosis: 2 months to >6 years). The overarching themes from analysis were: ongoing symptoms of the disease and its treatment; and ‘life-changing’ impacts. The overall impact of GCA on patients’ lives arose from a changing combination of symptoms, side effects, adaptations to everyday life and impacts on sense of normality. Important factors contributing to loss of normality were glucocorticoid-related treatment burdens and fear about possible future loss of vision.ConclusionsThe impact of GCA in patients’ everyday lives can be substantial, multifaceted and ongoing despite apparent control of disease activity. The findings of this study will help doctors better understand patient priorities, legitimise patients’ experiences of GCA and work with patients to set realistic treatment goals and plan adaptations to their everyday lives.

Details

ISSN :
20446055
Volume :
7
Issue :
8
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
BMJ open
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....6dddbfff167372e647a1654ce521b1be