Morris Anne, Yelin Edward H, Wong Belinda, Katz Patricia P
Arthritis Research Group, Department of Medicine, University of California, San Francisco, CA, USA.
Psychol Health Med. 2008 Oct;13(5):529-44. doi: 10.1080/13548500801927113.
This study examined the extent to which patterns of psychosocial risk were uniquely associated with long-term outcomes of rheumatoid arthritis (RA), after demographic factors and self-reported symptom severity over time were accounted for. Data were collected over an 8-year period from 561 individuals with RA who were participants in the ongoing UCSF RA Panel Study in 1995. Panel members were interviewed annually, using a comprehensive structured telephone interview. Psychosocial factors assessed included mastery, perceptions about adequacy of social support, the impact of RA and self-assessed ability to cope with RA and satisfaction with health and function. Cluster analysis of psychosocial factors identified three distinctive patterns/levels of psychosocial risk (high, medium and low risk). The unique effects of psychosocial risk status on changes in depressive symptoms, basic functional limitations, global pain ratings and average annual doctor visits over an 8-year period were estimated, using growth curve analyses. Analyses controlled for demographic factors (gender, marital/partner status, education, age and ethnicity), disease duration and year in the panel and time-varying self-reported symptom severity (morning stiffness, swollen joint counts, co-morbid medical conditions, extra-articular RA symptoms and changes in joint appearance), as well as self-reported medications taken over time (disease-modifying antirheumatic drugs [DMARDS], and prednisone). Overall, 32.4% of total variance in depressive symptoms was accounted for by the fully-estimated model, with 12.9% uniquely associated with psychosocial risk status. Half of the total variance (50.0%) in basic functional limitations was explained, with 12.1% of variance uniquely predicted by psychosocial risk status. Psychosocial risk status accounted for comparatively little total explained variance in global pain ratings (total = 38.6%, incremental = 3.2%), and average annual total doctor visits (total = 10.9%, incremental = 1.5%). Thus, psychosocial risk factors are more closely linked to depressive symptoms and function over time. Global pain and utilization appear to be more closely related to disease factors.
本研究在考虑人口统计学因素以及随时间自我报告的症状严重程度之后,考察了心理社会风险模式与类风湿关节炎(RA)长期预后的独特关联程度。数据是在8年期间从561名RA患者中收集的,这些患者是1995年正在进行的加州大学旧金山分校RA专题研究的参与者。专题研究成员每年接受一次全面的结构化电话访谈。评估的心理社会因素包括掌控感、对社会支持充足性的认知、RA的影响以及自我评估的应对RA的能力和对健康与功能的满意度。对心理社会因素进行聚类分析,确定了三种不同的心理社会风险模式/水平(高、中、低风险)。使用生长曲线分析估计了心理社会风险状态对8年期间抑郁症状变化、基本功能受限、总体疼痛评分和平均每年看医生次数的独特影响。分析控制了人口统计学因素(性别、婚姻/伴侣状况、教育程度、年龄和种族)、病程、在专题研究中的年份以及随时间变化的自我报告症状严重程度(晨僵、肿胀关节计数、合并的内科疾病、关节外RA症状和关节外观变化),以及随时间服用的自我报告药物(改善病情抗风湿药[DMARDs]和泼尼松)。总体而言,完全估计模型解释了抑郁症状总方差的32.4%,其中12.9%与心理社会风险状态独特相关。基本功能受限总方差的一半(50.0%)得到了解释,其中12.1%的方差由心理社会风险状态独特预测。心理社会风险状态在总体疼痛评分的总解释方差中占比较小(总计 = 38.6%,增量 = 3.2%),在平均每年看医生总次数中占比也较小(总计 = 10.9%,增量 = 1.5%)。因此,心理社会风险因素与抑郁症状和随时间的功能更密切相关。总体疼痛和医疗利用似乎与疾病因素关系更密切。