Burden of illness in Rett syndrome: initial evaluation of a disorder-specific caregiver survey.

IF 3.4 2区 医学 Q2 GENETICS & HEREDITY
Walter E Kaufmann, Alan K Percy, Jeffrey L Neul, Jenny Downs, Helen Leonard, Paige Nues, Girish D Sharma, Theresa E Bartolotta, Gillian S Townend, Leopold M G Curfs, Orietta Mariotti, Claude Buda, Heather M O'Leary, Lindsay M Oberman, Vanessa Vogel-Farley, Katherine V Barnes, Christopher U Missling
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Background: Rett syndrome (RTT) is a severe X-linked neurodevelopmental disorder associated with multiple neurologic impairments. Previous studies have shown challenges to the quality of life of individuals with RTT and their caregivers. However, instruments applied to quantify disease burden have not adequately captured the impact of these impairments on affected individuals and their families. Consequently, an international collaboration of stakeholders aimed at evaluating Burden of Illness (BOI) in RTT was organized.

Methods: Based on literature reviews and qualitative interviews with parents of children and adults with RTT, a caregiver questionnaire was constructed to evaluate 22 problems (inclusive of core characteristics, functional impairments, and comorbidities) often experienced with RTT, rated mainly with a 5-level Likert scale. The questionnaire was administered anonymously online to an international sample of 756 caregivers (predominantly parents) of girls and women with RTT. Descriptive statistics were used to identify problems of high frequency and impact on affected individuals and caregivers. Chi-square tests characterized the relationship between problem severity and impact responses, while nonparametric ANOVAs of raw and z-score adjusted scores identified agreement between severity and impact on individual and caregiver. Secondary inferential tests were used to determine the roles of age, clinical type, and country of residence on BOI in RTT.

Results: There was variability in reported frequency of problems, with the most prevalent, severe and impactful being those related to the core features of RTT (i.e., communication and fine and gross motor impairments). Chi-square analyses demonstrated interdependence between severity and impact responses, while ANOVAs showed that many problems had disproportionately greater impact than severity, either on affected individuals (e.g., hand stereotypies) or their caregivers (e.g., sleep difficulties, seizures, pain, and behavioral abnormalities). With certain exceptions (e.g., breath-holding, seizures), age, clinical type, or country of residence did not influence these BOI profiles.

Conclusions: Our data demonstrate that core features and related impairments are particularly impactful in RTT. However, problems with mild severity can also have disproportionate impact on affected individuals and, particularly, on their caregivers. Future analyses will examine the role of factors such as treatment outcomes, healthcare services, and healthcare provider's perspectives, in these BOI profiles.

雷特综合症患者的疾病负担:针对特定疾病的照顾者调查的初步评估。
背景介绍雷特综合征(RTT)是一种严重的 X 连锁神经发育障碍,伴有多种神经系统损伤。以往的研究表明,RTT 患者及其照顾者的生活质量面临挑战。然而,用于量化疾病负担的工具并未充分反映这些损伤对患者及其家庭的影响。因此,组织了一次利益相关者的国际合作,旨在评估 RTT 的疾病负担(BOI):方法:根据文献综述和对患有 RTT 的儿童和成人家长的定性访谈,编制了一份照顾者问卷,以评估 RTT 患者经常遇到的 22 个问题(包括核心特征、功能障碍和合并症),主要采用 5 级李克特量表进行评分。该问卷以匿名方式在线发放给 756 名患有 RTT 的女童和妇女的照顾者(主要是父母)。调查采用描述性统计方法,以确定高频率出现的问题以及这些问题对患者和照顾者的影响。卡方检验描述了问题严重程度与影响反应之间的关系,而原始分数和经z-score调整的分数的非参数方差分析确定了严重程度与对个人和照顾者的影响之间的一致性。二次推论检验用于确定年龄、临床类型和居住国对 RTT BOI 的影响:结果:报告的问题频率存在差异,最普遍、最严重和影响最大的是与 RTT 核心特征相关的问题(即交流、精细和粗大运动障碍)。卡方分析(Chi-square analyses)表明,严重程度和影响反应之间存在相互依存关系,而方差分析(ANOVAs)则表明,许多问题对患者(如手部刻板行为)或其照护者(如睡眠困难、癫痫发作、疼痛和行为异常)的影响比严重程度大得多。除了某些例外情况(如憋气、癫痫发作),年龄、临床类型或居住国对这些 BOI 特征没有影响:我们的数据表明,核心特征和相关障碍对 RTT 的影响尤为明显。结论:我们的数据表明,核心特征和相关障碍对 RTT 的影响尤为严重。然而,严重程度较轻的问题也会对患者,尤其是他们的护理人员造成不成比例的影响。未来的分析将研究治疗结果、医疗保健服务和医疗保健提供者的观点等因素在这些 BOI 特征中的作用。
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来源期刊
Orphanet Journal of Rare Diseases
Orphanet Journal of Rare Diseases 医学-医学:研究与实验
CiteScore
6.30
自引率
8.10%
发文量
418
审稿时长
4-8 weeks
期刊介绍: Orphanet Journal of Rare Diseases is an open access, peer-reviewed journal that encompasses all aspects of rare diseases and orphan drugs. The journal publishes high-quality reviews on specific rare diseases. In addition, the journal may consider articles on clinical trial outcome reports, either positive or negative, and articles on public health issues in the field of rare diseases and orphan drugs. The journal does not accept case reports.
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