Silke Linda, Kirresh Othman, Sturt Jackie, Lempp Heidi
Outpatient Physiotherapy Department, Mile End Hospital, Bancroft Rd, London, E1 4DG, UK.
Chelsea and Westminster Hospital, 369 Fulham Road, London, SW10 9NH, UK.
BMC Rheumatol. 2021 Nov 16;5(1):51. doi: 10.1186/s41927-021-00220-4.
Patients with Rheumatoid Arthritis (RA) may experience psychological distress (depression, anxiety) in addition to their physical symptoms. People with RA may also experience disease-specific distress (DSD), related to the specific burden of living with their life-long condition. DSD is a patient reported outcome in several long-term conditions, including type 1 and 2 diabetes. The aims of this study were to determine whether DSD is experienced by people with RA, and if so, develop a Patient Reported Outcome Measure (PROM) to assess for DSD in people with RA.
A five-phased qualitative study was conducted which consisted of a secondary data analysis of 61 interviews of people with rheumatological disease (Phase 1), validation of findings via a Patient and Public Involvement (PPI) group of people with RA (n = 4) (Phase 2), item generation for a PROM (Phase 3) and establishing face and content validity of the PROM via PPI group (n = 4) and individual cognitive interviews (n = 9) of people with RA respectively (Phase 4 and 5). The final PROM was presented at a Patient Education Evening for patients with long-term rheumatological conditions, including RA, and carers.
Five themes of rheumatological disease distress emerged from Phase 1, which were validated in the Phase 2 PPI group. After Phases 3-5, the Rheumatoid Arthritis Distress Scale (RADS) was formed of 39 items and 3 supplementary questions. Overall participants reported the content of the RADS to be clear and relevant, and that DSD is a valid concept in RA, distinct from other entities like clinical depression or anxiety.
DSD appears to be an important concept in RA. The 39-item RADS demonstrates acceptable face and content validity in this patient group. Further psychometric testing is needed. The RADS may be a useful tool for healthcare professionals to identify RA distress.
类风湿关节炎(RA)患者除了有身体症状外,还可能经历心理困扰(抑郁、焦虑)。RA患者也可能经历与终生患病的特定负担相关的疾病特异性困扰(DSD)。DSD是包括1型和2型糖尿病在内的几种长期疾病中的患者报告结局。本研究的目的是确定RA患者是否经历DSD,如果是,则开发一种患者报告结局测量工具(PROM)来评估RA患者的DSD。
进行了一项分五个阶段的定性研究,包括对61名风湿病患者的访谈进行二次数据分析(第1阶段),通过RA患者的患者及公众参与(PPI)小组(n = 4)对研究结果进行验证(第2阶段),为PROM生成条目(第3阶段),并分别通过PPI小组(n = 4)和RA患者的个体认知访谈(n = 9)确定PROM的表面效度和内容效度(第4阶段和第5阶段)。最终的PROM在一个针对包括RA在内的长期风湿病患者及其护理人员的患者教育晚会上展示。
第1阶段出现了五个风湿病困扰主题,并在第2阶段的PPI小组中得到验证。经过第3 - 5阶段,类风湿关节炎困扰量表(RADS)由39个条目和3个补充问题组成。总体而言,参与者报告RADS的内容清晰且相关,并且DSD在RA中是一个有效的概念,有别于临床抑郁或焦虑等其他情况。
DSD似乎是RA中的一个重要概念。这个39项的RADS在该患者群体中显示出可接受的表面效度和内容效度。还需要进一步的心理测量学测试。RADS可能是医疗保健专业人员识别RA困扰的有用工具。