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Health-related quality of life and burden of fatigue in patients with primary immune thrombocytopenia by phase of disease

Authors :
Fabio, Efficace
Franco, Mandelli
Paola, Fazi
Cristina, Santoro
Gianluca, Gaidano
Francesco, Cottone
Alessandra, Borchiellini
Monica, Carpenedo
Maria Pina, Simula
Valeria, Di Giacomo
Micaela, Bergamaschi
Iolanda Donatella, Vincelli
Francesco, Rodeghiero
Marco, Ruggeri
Laura, Scaramucci
Alessandro, Rambaldi
Nicola, Cascavilla
Fabio, Forghieri
Annamaria, Petrungaro
Paolo, Ditonno
Giovanni, Caocci
Sonia, Cirrincione
Maria Gabriella, Mazzucconi
Source :
American journal of hematology. 91(10)
Publication Year :
2016

Abstract

The main objective of this study was to compare health-related quality of life (HRQOL) of primary immune thrombocytopenia (pITP) patients with that of general population, overall, and by patient group (i.e., newly diagnosed, persistent, and chronic patients). Fatigue was also investigated as a secondary objective. Overall, 424 adult patients were enrolled in a multicenter observational study and the control group consisted of a representative sample from the general population. Propensity score matching plus further multivariate linear regression adjustment was used to compare HRQOL outcomes between pITP patients and general population. Mean age of patients was 54 years. Of those with HRQOL assessment, 99 patients (23.6%) were newly diagnosed, 53 (12.6%) were persistent, and 268 (63.8%) were chronic pITP patients. Comparison by patient group versus their respective peers in the general population revealed greater impairments in persistent pITP patients. Persistent pITP patients reported clinically meaningful impairments in physical functioning (-15; 95% CI -24.1 to -5.8; P = 0.002), social functioning (-15.3; 95% CI -25.5 to -5.1; P = 0.004), role physical (-28.4; 95% CI -43.1 to -13.7; P 0.001), role emotional (-23.9; 95% CI -40.1 to -7.7; P = 0.004), and mental health scales (-11.3; 95% CI -21.2 to -1.4; P = 0.026) of the SF-36 questionnaire. Higher fatigue severity was associated with lower physical and mental HRQOL outcomes. Our findings suggest that the burden of the disease and treatment might depend on the disease phase and that persistent pITP patients are the most vulnerable subgroup. Am. J. Hematol. 91:995-1001, 2016. © 2016 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.

Details

ISSN :
10968652
Volume :
91
Issue :
10
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
American journal of hematology
Accession number :
edsair.pmid..........e96ce65b9bbc2d5a03dd7a3e8e185fc5