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Immune thrombocytopenia (ITP) World Impact Survey (iWISh): Patient and physician perceptions of diagnosis, signs and symptoms, and treatment

Authors :
James B. Bussel
Serge Laborde
Nichola Cooper
Tom Bailey
Cristina Santoro
Mervyn Morgan
Drew Provan
Jens Haenig
Marc Michel
Barbara Lovrencic
Caroline Kruse
Donald M. Arnold
Shirley Watson
Yoshiaki Tomiyama
Ming Hou
Gavin Taylor-Stokes
Waleed Ghanima
Alexandra Kruse
Source :
American Journal of Hematology. 96:188-198
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Wiley, 2020.

Abstract

Immune thrombocytopenia (ITP) is now well‐known to reduce patients' health‐related quality of life. However, data describing which signs and symptoms patients and physicians perceive as having the greatest impact are limited, as is understanding the full effects of ITP treatments. I‐WISh (ITP World Impact Survey) was an exploratory, cross‐sectional survey designed to establish the multifaceted impact of ITP, and its treatments, on patients' lives. It focused on perceptions of 1507 patients and 472 physicians from 13 countries regarding diagnostic pathway, frequency and severity of signs and symptoms, and treatment use. Twenty‐two percent of patients experienced delayed diagnosis (caused by several factors), 73% of whom felt anxious as a result. Patients rated fatigue among the most frequent, severe symptom associated with ITP at diagnosis (58% most frequent; 73% most severe), although physicians assigned it lower priority (30%). Fatigue was one of the few symptoms persisting at survey completion (50% and 65%, respectively) and was the top symptom patients wanted resolved (46%). Participating physicians were experienced at treating ITP, thereby recognizing the need to limit corticosteroid use to newly‐diagnosed or first‐relapse patients and espoused increased use of thrombopoietin receptor agonists and anti‐CD20 after relapse in patients with persistent/chronic disease. Patient and physicians were largely aligned on diagnosis, symptoms, and treatment use. I‐WISh demonstrated that patients and physicians largely align on overall ITP symptom burden, with certain differences, for example, fatigue. Understanding the emotional and clinical toll of ITP on the patient will facilitate shared decision‐management, setting and establishment of treatment goals and disease stage‐appropriate treatment selection.

Details

ISSN :
10968652 and 03618609
Volume :
96
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
American Journal of Hematology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....7927e3eec69f0c997146924d24194ae0
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1002/ajh.26045