F07亨廷顿病疾病负担研究(HDBOI)欧洲参与者的人口统计学特征和卫生资源利用

R. Willock, S. Frank, T. Mestre, A. Arnesen, A. Fisher, H. Hubberstey, C. Stanley, M. Winkelmann, Idaira Rodríguez, L. Ruiz, R. Dolmetsch, Nanxin Li, S. Ratsch, T. Ali
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摘要

亨廷顿氏病(HD)是一种罕见的、遗传性的、复杂的神经退行性疾病,影响认知、运动和情绪。目前缺乏最新的真实证据,可以从多国角度按疾病阶段记录HD的总体负担。本研究概述了HDBOI研究的欧洲参与者的人口统计学特征和与hd相关的健康资源使用(HRU)。方法HDBOI是一个回顾性的、横断面的数据集,它捕获了治疗医生报告的一组HD患者的社会人口学、临床变量和HRU。患者和护理人员通过两份可选问卷报告了与HD相关的健康相关的生活质量、非医疗和间接费用的信息。参与研究的欧洲国家包括德国、西班牙、意大利、法国和英国。采用方差分析(ANOVA)评估不同疾病分期差异的统计学意义。结果HDBOI欧洲样本包括1602例HD患者,其中早期(ES)占40%,中期(MS)占34%,晚期(AS)占26%。约59%的患者为男性,平均年龄47.5岁(SD±13.7)。共有445名患者和465名护理人员完成了可选问卷。在HRU方面,平均年就诊次数随着疾病严重程度的增加而增加(p结论HDBOI研究为按疾病阶段量化HD卫生资源使用提供了新的数据,增加了HD社区的证据基础。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
F07 Demographic characteristics and health resource use of the european participants from the huntington’s disease burden of illness study (HDBOI)
Background Huntington’s Disease (HD) is a rare, inherited, and complex neuro-degenerative disorder, affecting cognition, movement, and mood. There is a lack of up-to-date real-world evidence documenting the overall burden of HD by disease stage and from a multinational perspective. This study provides an overview of demographic characteristics and HD-related health resource use (HRU) of European participants of the HDBOI study. Methods The HDBOI is a retrospective, cross-sectional dataset that captures sociodemographic, clinical variables and HRU of a cohort of HD patients which is reported by the treating physician. Patients and caregivers reported information on health-related quality of life, non-medical and indirect costs associated with HD by means of two optional questionnaires. European countries included in the study were Germany, Spain, Italy, France and UK. Statistical significance of differences by disease stage were assessed by ANOVA tests. Results The HDBOI European sample was comprised of 1,602 HD patients, of which 40% were early stage (ES), 34% mid stage (MS) and 26% advanced stage (AS). Approximately 59% of the patients were male and the mean age was 47.5 years (SD± 13.7). A total of 445 patients and 465 caregivers completed their optional questionnaires. Regarding HRU, the average number of annual visits to the treating physician increased with disease severity (p Conclusion The HDBOI study provides novel data to quantify HD health resource use by disease stage, increasing the evidence base for the HD community.
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