Zettl Uwe K, Henze Thomas, Essner Ute, Flachenecker Peter
Center of Neurology, University of Rostock, Gehlsheimer Str. 20, 18147, Rostock, Germany,
Eur J Health Econ. 2014 Dec;15(9):953-66. doi: 10.1007/s10198-013-0537-5. Epub 2013 Dec 1.
To describe the current management patterns of multiple sclerosis (MS) patients with spasticity in Germany and the impact of MS spasticity on quality of life (QoL) and associated costs.
Non-interventional, multicentre, cross-sectional and retrospective burden-of-disease study including 414 MS patients with spasticity (age from 25 to 80 years) from 42 clinical practices across Germany. All patients were diagnosed with MS-related spasticity based on neurological examination at least 12 months before inclusion in the study. Three different forms were completed on different aspects of the disease: the patient questionnaire, the chart documentation form and the physician questionnaire.
Mild, moderate and severe spasticity were found in 27.3, 44.0 and 28.7 % of patients, respectively. Associated symptoms and QoL scores were worse in patients with higher degrees of spasticity. In particular, higher mean scores for sleep impairment (mild vs. severe, 2.1 vs. 4.3), mean spasm count (3/day vs. 10.1/day), mean WEIMuS fatigue score (15.8 vs. 19.8), increased walking time (9.6 vs. 20.2 s) and lower mean QoL scores (MSQoL-54 physical subscale, 54.9 vs. 39.5; EQ-5D, 0.60 vs. 0.30) were reported in patients with severe spasticity in comparison to patients with mild spasticity. Patient management mainly comprised physiotherapy (mild vs. severe, 65.5 vs. 85.7 %) and medication (84.2 vs. 64.8 %) with baclofen. The average cost for patients with mild spasticity was €2,268/year, increasing to €8,688/patient/year for patients with severe spasticity. The health insurance costs showed the same trend.
MS patients with spasticity suffer a significant burden because of resulting disabilities and reduced QoL, especially in cases of severe spasticity. Moreover, spasticity causes high costs that increase with increasing severity.
描述德国多发性硬化症(MS)痉挛患者的当前管理模式,以及MS痉挛对生活质量(QoL)和相关成本的影响。
非干预性、多中心、横断面和回顾性疾病负担研究,纳入了来自德国42家临床机构的414例MS痉挛患者(年龄25至80岁)。所有患者在纳入研究前至少12个月经神经学检查确诊为MS相关痉挛。针对疾病的不同方面完成了三种不同的表格:患者问卷、病历记录表格和医生问卷。
分别有27.3%、44.0%和28.7%的患者存在轻度、中度和重度痉挛。痉挛程度较高的患者相关症状和QoL评分更差。特别是,与轻度痉挛患者相比,重度痉挛患者报告的睡眠障碍平均得分更高(轻度vs.重度,2.1 vs. 4.3)、平均痉挛次数更多(3次/天vs. 10.1次/天)、平均WEIMuS疲劳得分更高(15.8 vs. 19.8)、步行时间增加(9.6 vs. 20.2秒)以及平均QoL得分更低(MSQoL - 54身体亚量表,54.9 vs. 39.5;EQ - 5D,0.60 vs. 0.30)。患者管理主要包括物理治疗(轻度vs.重度,65.5% vs. 85.7%)和使用巴氯芬的药物治疗(84.2% vs. 64.8%)。轻度痉挛患者的平均费用为每年2268欧元,重度痉挛患者则增至每年每位患者8688欧元。医疗保险费用呈现相同趋势。
MS痉挛患者因由此导致的残疾和QoL降低而承受重大负担,尤其是在重度痉挛的情况下。此外,痉挛会导致高昂的成本,且随着严重程度的增加而上升。