Aquarius Annelies E, Denollet Johan, de Vries Jolanda, Hamming Jaap F
Center of Research on Psychology in Somatic diseases, Department of Medical Psychology, Tilburg University, Tilburg, The Netherlands.
J Vasc Surg. 2007 Sep;46(3):507-12. doi: 10.1016/j.jvs.2007.04.039. Epub 2007 Jul 30.
Peripheral arterial disease (PAD) is associated with poor health-related quality of life (HRQOL), but individual differences in this patient-based outcome are not fully understood. We examined the impact of PAD severity, invasive treatment, and type D personality, defined as tendencies to experience negative emotions and be socially inhibited, on HRQOL in a 1-year follow-up study.
At their first visit to the department of surgery at the St. Elisabeth Hospital in Tilburg, The Netherlands, 203 consecutive PAD patients completed the DS14 type D personality and RAND-36 questionnaires (all self-report). Clinical data were derived from patients' medical files and included ankle-brachial index (ABI), initial and absolute claudication distance (ICD, ACD), and invasive treatment. The main outcome was HRQOL at 1-year follow-up.
HRQOL improved between baseline and follow-up, and invasive treatment led to significant improvements in the subscales Physical Functioning (P = .005) and Pain (P = .003). Type D patients were severely impaired in their HRQOL compared with other patients at baseline (P < .01) and at follow-up (P < .05). ABI and ACD also predicted HRQOL at follow-up. After adjusting for ABI and ACD, invasive treatment and type D personality independently predicted all HRQOL domains, except for Physical Functioning. Overall, type D personality predicted increased risk for both poor General Health (odds ratio [OR], 3.70; 95% confidence interval [CI], 1.69 to 8.08; P = .001) and poor Mental Health (OR, 6.01; 95% CI, 2.44 to 14.79, P < .0001) at 1 year after the PAD diagnosis.
Despite an overall improvement, type D patients remained more impaired in 1-year HRQOL than other patients, adjusting for ABI and ACD. Type D personality is a psychologic risk factor that predicts poor patient-based outcomes in PAD and should be taken into account when HRQOL in PAD is evaluated.
外周动脉疾病(PAD)与健康相关生活质量(HRQOL)较差有关,但基于患者的这一结局的个体差异尚未完全了解。在一项为期1年的随访研究中,我们研究了PAD严重程度、侵入性治疗以及D型人格(定义为体验负面情绪和社交抑制的倾向)对HRQOL的影响。
在荷兰蒂尔堡圣伊丽莎白医院外科首次就诊时,203例连续的PAD患者完成了DS14 D型人格问卷和兰德36项健康调查量表(均为自我报告)。临床数据来自患者的病历,包括踝臂指数(ABI)、初始和绝对跛行距离(ICD、ACD)以及侵入性治疗。主要结局是1年随访时的HRQOL。
HRQOL在基线和随访之间有所改善,侵入性治疗导致身体功能(P = 0.005)和疼痛(P = 0.003)子量表有显著改善。与其他患者相比,D型患者在基线时(P < 0.01)和随访时(P < 0.05)的HRQOL严重受损。ABI和ACD也可预测随访时的HRQOL。在调整ABI和ACD后,侵入性治疗和D型人格独立预测了除身体功能外的所有HRQOL领域。总体而言,D型人格预测PAD诊断后1年时总体健康状况差(优势比[OR],3.70;95%置信区间[CI],1.69至8.08;P = 0.001)和心理健康状况差(OR,6.01;95%CI,2.44至14.79,P < 0.0001)的风险增加。
尽管总体有所改善,但在调整ABI和ACD后,D型患者在1年HRQOL方面仍比其他患者受损更严重。D型人格是一种心理风险因素,可预测PAD患者基于患者的不良结局,在评估PAD患者的HRQOL时应予以考虑。